Ooh, this looks fun! What is the green squiggly stuff? Was it yummy?
Ooh, this looks fun! What is the green squiggly stuff? Was it yummy?
letโs be primitive horses with mama
Donโt think I share these here
Behold, my Solosis line obsessi- I mean love
#fakemon #pokemon
Hmm, itโs very close, but I think I prefer the one with the red sides. ๐ค
Still lovely work either way! ๐
This sounds really intriguing! Iโll definitely be keeping an eye on it!
These are fun! I think Iโd go with Moink out of this set.
Handmade 32mm D20 made to look like a dinosaur fossil in dirt.
Handmade 7 piece polyhedral dice set made to look like cracked porcelain with kintsugi repair lines.
Today is dice drop day! There are tons of dice up for grabs like this fossil chonky D20 and these Kintsugi Porcelain Dice! You can find everything here! colorspraycreations.com/collections/...
That fossil d20!!! ๐๐๐ I am literally drooling over it, I swear.
Beautiful work!
What is โfacilitation authorityโ? I have not heard that phrase before.
OPEN THE DOOR
GET ON THE FLOOR
TIME TO GOBBLE UP SOME DINOSAURS
(okay wait actually please don't eat these)
(and if you do please don't sue us, they're very clearly stickers you little gremlin)
A forest floor with lime green moss, some twigs, and a pretty, delicate grey mushroom with a tiny cap (not even 2cm across) and an extremely thin tall stem. It is very smooth but matte in texture, not glossy or slimy at all.
A small mushroom. I love how brilliant green the moss is๐
This Hubble image shows a small section of the Prawn Nebula (also known as IC 4628) here in both visible and invisible infrared light, capturing dazzling detail of the nebulaโs structure, including bright areas of glowing gas and countless bright massive stars.
๐งต
This spectacular Hubble image was captured as part of a survey of protostars (stars in formation) of medium and high mass.
It features just a small portion of the Prawn Nebula (also known as IC 4628), located some 6,000 ly away in Scorpius.
โก๏ธ science.nasa.gov/missions/hub...
๐ญ ๐งช #galactic
1/4
I love these! ๐ Excellent work!
A set of 7 polyhedral dice. They are a mixture of pale blue and purple with a black swirl in each. The numbers are painted a light pink
Screw it, some new dice! Taking photos isn't quite as effective as just hiding in rimworld but hey its done now!
#dice #handmadedice #dnd #ttrpg
Easter, not easer. Apologies for the typo
Interesting! Reminds me of that plastic grass that gets put in easer baskets.
This reminds me of a question about solar system formation and star vs planet encounters I had when I was a kid. Probably has a simple answer given my youth at the time, but is there any accounts on Bluesky that answer submitted questions like that?
An abstract close-up of vibrant green moss covering the rugged lava formations of the Eldhraun lava field in Iceland. The soft, cushion-like shapes flow across the dark volcanic rock, forming an organic pattern of rounded textures, gentle shadows, and richly saturated greens that feel both ancient and alive.
Vibrance grows where fire once ruled โ the ancient lava fields of Eldhraun.
#Iceland ๐ฎ๐ธ #EastCoastKin
#PhotographersOfBlueSky
#NaturePhotography ๐ท
#ColorADay #GreenSat
#BlueSkyArtShow #Vibrant
#AlphabetChallenge
#WeekAforAbstract
A female mandarin duck perched on a mossy rock at the edge of calm water, with a clear reflection beneath her and soft green foliage blurred in the background.
Female Mandarin Duck observing the calmness around her
#BirdPhotography #WildlifePhotography #BritishWildlife #UKWildlife #NaturePhotography
A brown stripey Apatosaurus walks through a glade of lush tree ferns, cycads, and conifers. Small theropods run past in the foreground.
An Apatosaurus meanders through a lush glade in the ancient Morrison.
#sciart #paleoart
Photo of the pitcher part of a purple pitcher plant. The โpitcherโ is mostly red on the bottom and yellow-green with red veins at the topโฆwhich is open to allow it to fill with water and to catch insects. The pitcher plant is in a moss covered bog with other small green shrubs.
Purple Pitcher Plant. #Newfoundland, Canada. One of our carnivorous plant species. #plant #botany #bog
Top two frogs are green frogs with ridgelines indicated by bright green arrows; bullfrogs have tympana ridgelines indicated with red arrows
IDs: Green frogs have ridgelines extending from eyes down their backs; bullfrogs have ridgelines around their obvious tympana (eardrums) #Herps #Frogs
๐ฆ #FossilFriday โผ๏ธConcretions sometimes contain exquisitely preserved crustaceans. Here are some Eocene (~45 million-year-old) crabs from Oregon, USA. Collected, prepared, and donated by Bob Manley. Specimens: University of Alabama Museums' paleontology collection. #paleontology #fossil ๐ฆ
I have a few little ammonites in rock that were super cool to see when cracked open. I canโt imagine how awesome finding a crab would be!
Tan rock showing the geometric outlines of duckbill scales in great relief. Curatorial hand for scale.
Happy #FossilFriday from dinosaur skin! This impression is from an Edmontosaurus discovered in the Hell Creek Formation of North Dakota.
I donโt know anything about rendering, but I want to say that it looks amazing so far! I love all the details and how the flora frames the dino! Excellent work!
Fascinating! I totally would have just thought they were random spots, not fossils. Thanks for sharing!
Cut and polished block of limestone (packstone/biomicrite), exposing many fusilinid foraminifera in cross-section, in various orientations. Across the short axis, they resemble small chambered cephalopod shells, with tightly spiraled chambers. Across the long axis, they resemble a grain of rice with concentric inner layers. Label: "Fusulinids (Triticites?) Lower Wolfcamp, Permian "Wolfcamp Hills" locality, northeast of Orogrande, New Mexico. Donated by William Lovejoy."
Glass vial with over a dozen gray, calcitic fossils roughly the size and shape of grains of rice. Label: "Fusulinids (Triticites?) Lower Wolfcamp, Permian "Wolfcamp Hills" locality, northeast of Orogrande, New Mexico. Donated by William Lovejoy."
#FossilFriday is also foram Friday, with some big-ass microfossils on deck! โ๏ธ๐งช๐ฆ
Fusulinid foraminifera are an extinct group of large single celled organisms that produced calcitic shells. Believed to have been photosymbiotic, they were common in shallow seafloor settings in the late Paleozoic.
Vietnamese mossy frog. By David Okidoki Photography.
Finally started snowing for real here tonight! First snow weโve gotten thatโs more than a dusting.
Wonder how long itโs going to stick around?