WatchingDS9 for the first time and not even an episode in :
Julian bashir : *says literally any thing*
Me : omigodhesoadorableimgonnadiehesjustababyyy
Pour mes fellow français out there si on rapportait l'histoire de la Terre sur une année, actuellement on serait au niveau de l'equateur, il ferait chaud sa grand-mère, les massifs anciens genre armoricain (c'est les granites en Bretagne) s'érodent mais les Alpes et les Pyrénées existent pas encore...
On est presque mi décembre et quasi toutes les structures que j'ai étudié en géologie sur des cartes depuis le début de ma scolarité n'ont pas encore été créées. La méditerranée n'existe pas encore... l'Atlantique non plus...Et on est mi décembre...
Do you like volcanoes but wish they were bigger?
Would you like to see the world choked with smoke?
Do you in all your cosmic power feel like things need a hard reset?
Then the Permian period might be for you!
Lasting from 298.9-251.9 Ma, if you compressed all of Earth's history into a year, December 7th-11th would mark the Permian period.
While it did see some innovations in life with the continued diversification of therapsids and sauropsids as they spread around Pangaea, the period is mainly known for mass extinctions, of which there were at least three.
The first was fairly minor in comparison to the others, where the end of the early Permian saw the extinction of several groups of early land vertebrates such as Dimetrodon as other tetrapods gained prominence.
And then, some time in the mid Permian, the sea began to erupt.
The Emeishan Traps are a formation in China where basalt covers an area extending approximately 250,000 square kilometers, which is roughly the size of the state of Michigan. It could have originally been twice that size, covering an area larger than the state of California with volcanic deposits an average of 700 meters thick. Originating on the sea floor, it released massive amounts of sulfur and carbon dioxides, wreaking havoc on the world's climate. A recent paper published in the journal Geology also makes the case that the eruptions also managed to heat up oil and gas deposits in the area, cooking them underground and leading to the release of even more carbon dioxide and methane gas.
Estimates on the impact of this eruption vary, but around a third of marine life went extinct, and the majority of survivors on land were burrowing animals.
This was already about as significant as the extinction that would kill the non-avian dinosaurs in the late Triassic Cretaceous in terms of severity, but it would soon be eclipsed by the single worst mass extinction in Earth's history: the end Permian, or "The Great Dying".
In what is now modern day Siberia, another massive series of eruptions took place, forming the Siberian Traps. Over the course of two million years, around a million cubic miles of basalt were laid down over an area of 7 million square kilometers. This was 14 times the size of the Emeishan Traps, and covered an area roughly the size of Australia. Most of it erupted in the first million years. The massive amounts of carbon and sulfur dioxide released led to dramatic ocean acidification and climate change.
It is speculated that the traps also lit coal fields on fire, adding to their emissions. This, combined with a possible contribution from a meteorite impact on the other side of the world led to mass die offs.
81% of Marine life, and 70% of terrestrial species went extinct.
On land, it is estimated to have taken nearly 30 million years for life to recover.
As heavy as that is though, it did recover.
When the dust settled, there was still life in the oceans, and plants still grew on the land, and animals came out from their burrows, blinking in the light of a new day. And they lived.
New species would come. Life would be made new. The sun continued to shine, and rain continued to fall, and in the end the Earth had made it through.
Life found a way to make it through a level of destruction beyond anything we have ever seen or could imagine as a species. And, with a little bit of hope, help, and luck, so can we.
Edit: ( Mistakenly wrote "Triassic" rather than Cretaceous)
Baby Clark doodoodoodoodoodoo
Baby Clark doodoodoodoodoodoo
Baby Clark doodoodoodoodoodoodoodoo doodoodoo
We are approaching the maximum of images you can post here so I thought it was time I make a little showcase of all the formation pieces we covered so far on the streams.
For people who don't know: for several months now I draw one formation or fossil locality every Saturday. The next place we visit is chosen by a wheel of names, which we also constantly fill up again when a new formation is picked.
I try to make it as interesting as possible in my composition and choice of animals and I can tell you this series has been a great training when it comes to constructing these, how I call them, Menageries.
I have to thank a team of friends and colleagues who help behind the scenes with research, creation of size charts and conversation partners when it comes to deciding on the compositions of these pieces. Their help has been invaluable!
Oh no i'm not a star trek fan i m e a n i 've baaarely started i'm only starting season 4 of TNG t h a t ' s o n l y about 55 h o u r s of content i mean can you imagine. I'm not a fan no i've only learned 2 or 3 words in klingon that's nothing. I mean i wouldn't understand most star trek references so i'm not like... Legit you know. I don't deserve to wear that federation pin i bought 6 months ago.....no yeah
I know it was probably said like a million times since the movie came out, but my favourite detail in the whole movie is in the DNA numbers with Red Hood's 635 being the issue number when he appears under that name while Jason's 428 is for the issue in which he dies
There is poetry in the fact that the only way to buy booster gold funko pop is by buying the set with him and ted
family time on the Carrier
Because of reasons i watched these two episodes within 2 weeks of each other and now i think i might not be okay emotionally
Star trek season 5 ep 23 and Doctor Who season 1 ep 6
#why must you make me cry over living beings who are fused with machines and are meant not to have individuality but because of an accident and some woman's compassion they start to feel and they experience loneliness and now they can never fulfill their sole life mission
#yes i know cybermen are the better analogy
#but there were no cybermen in season one of dw and i've rewatched only that one recently
#Hugh looked back 🥲
#He looked at Geordi one last time
#i'm going to cry
#what is it with Geordi and androids
My favorite thing about Earthsea is it has the fairy type magic where knowing something's true name gives you power over it. The catch though, is that it isn't a convention limited to the fair folk and is a central pillar to all magic in the world, so you end up with people going by the fantasy version of online usernames to avoid giving out their fantasy social security number.
Update : I think it might be marble from the area, i know a lot of train stations in France like to use local rock to look more like its background.
I couldn't find online which rock it is, but i found the architect and his firm's website so that's cool. It's just going to be one of those things where in a few years i'll take one glance at those pictures and immediatly identify it like " what a dumbass i was those years ago"
But i really wanted to find info online of it's age and origin but :(
Maybe it's the pill for motionsickness (which makes me sleepy and completely high), maybe it's the fact i've had a fever for 3 days or maybe it's because i slept 5h in the last few days but oh boy the floor at my train station is freaking cool i need to know more
It looks like it's loads of bivalves but i'm really bad at identifying even when i'm not tripping
22 | she/her | currently studying rocks, casually enjoying dc comics, conscientiously making a name for myself in Markarth and its surroundings at warp 9 | geology account @disthene-al2sio5
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