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ultrafacts:
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classichorrorblog:

Army Of Darkness
Directed by Sam Raimi (1992)

classichorrorblog:

Evil Dead II
Directed by Sam Raimi (1987)

Imagine you are sitting down in a chair and on a screen before you you are shown a bloody, ripping film of yourself undergoing surgery. The surgery saved your life. It was pivotal in making you you. But you don’t remember it. Or do you? Do we understand the events that make us who we are? Do we ever understand the factors that make us do the things we do? When we sleep at night – when we walk across a field and see a tree full of sleeping birds – when we tell small lies to our friends – when we make love – what acts of surgery are happening to our souls – what damage and healing and shock are we going through that we will never be able to fathom? What films are generated that we will never be shown?
Douglas Coupland, Shampoo Planet (via quotespile)
themoviewasteland:
“ Puppet Master (1989)
”
@brundleflyforawhiteguy
themoviewasteland:
“ Puppet Master (1989)
”

themoviewasteland:

Puppet Master (1989)

Countdown to Calving at Antarctica’s Brunt Ice Shelf

nasa:

image

Cracks growing across Antarctica’s Brunt Ice Shelf are poised to release an iceberg with an area about twice the size of New York City, (about 604 square miles). It is not yet clear how the remaining ice shelf will respond following the break, posing an uncertain future for scientific infrastructure and a human presence on the shelf that was first established in 1955.

image

NASA Earth Observatory image by Joshua Stevens, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey. Story by Kathryn Hansen, with image interpretation by Chris Shuman (NASA/UMBC).

The above image, from the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8, shows the area on January 23, 2019. The crack along the top of the image—the so-called Halloween crack—first appeared in late October 2016 and continues to grow eastward from an area known as the McDonald Ice Rumples. The rumples are due to the way ice flows over an underwater formation, where the bedrock rises high enough to reach into the underside of the ice shelf. This rocky formation impedes the flow of ice and causes pressure waves, crevasses, and rifts to form at the surface.

The more immediate concern is the rift visible in the center of the image. Previously stable for about 35 years, this crack recently started accelerating northward as fast as 4 kilometers per year.

Calving is a normal part of the life cycle of ice shelves, but the recent changes are unfamiliar in this area. The edge of the Brunt Ice Shelf has evolved slowly since Ernest Shackleton surveyed the coast in 1915, but it has been speeding up in the past several years.

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com

sesiondemadrugada:

Démanty noci (Jan Nemec, 1964).

merelygifted:

 It was a surprise to find the tattoos on a male mummy. [Oxford professor Dr Renee] Friedman says other, later female Egyptian mummies with tattoos had been discovered, and a set of figurines with drawings on them did suggest to Egyptologists that tattoos likely existed at the time for women. The male’s body art “was a real game changer in our perceptions of tattooing,” she says.

These markings are roughly contemporaneous with Otzi, a man who was preserved in ice in Europe and dates back to the late 4th millennium BCE. However, archaeologists have suggested that his tattoos may have had a medicinal purpose – Friedman suggests they could be an early form of acupuncture.

These Egyptian tattoos, she says, were meant for show. “They’re on parts of the body that would have been on daily display,” she says, adding to what we already know about predynastic fashion. “You’re showing off tattoos, we know that they had colorful clothing, they had colorful leather. They probably looked fabulous.” 

Via my BF & Some Of The Oldest-Ever Tattoos Found On Egyptian Mummies : The Two-Way : NPR