Trust in science it’s what got us here to the present. Vaccines work. Avoid sea-salt, it’s loaded with micro & nano plastics that end up in your body/brain
@Noahqxc0@HaedonMeyer@DarkoStateNews Do you care about the 15 or so resignations/firings or arrests In UM’s Atheletics program while you were in school?
@Noahqxc0@HaedonMeyer@DarkoStateNews Now you’re just making sh*t up.
The great thing about the UM cheating operation is that the enter country knows you for what you are. A bunch no good, dirty rotten, cheating gutter trash w/an ugly fan base.
@Noahqxc0@HaedonMeyer@DarkoStateNews Hey Noah nothing. Cry harder.
The Ohio State Buckeyes are the winningest college football team since 2000, holding the most overall wins (over 285) and boasting the highest winning percentage among all FBS programs during this span (approximately 84%)
Wait. For. It. NASA animation shows Global temperatures warm slowly at first, then rapidly. Warming is accelerating! Here’s the truth. It’s real. It’s us. And we have to come to terms with it, and deal with reality, rather than deceiving ourselves, and hoping it goes away. It won’t… without intervention. #climate #globalwarming #science #climatechange
A tribute to John Coltrane:
I combined family footage and performance clips into a music video for one of my favorite songs of his, “Equinox”.
Hope you enjoy watching it as much as I enjoyed making it.
I’m just really sick and tired of people mocking those who care about the planet.
• Clean air matters.
• Biodiversity matters.
• Living forests matter.
• Healthy oceans matter.
• A stable climate matters.
• Safe drinking water matters.
This shouldn’t be controversial.
@LudditeTech@Scooter59306645@FurkanGozukara Every data center has a massive grass strip around their facilities. Look it up it is a huge waste of water and increases each facility’s carbon footprint.
In the 1990s, Canadian ecologist Suzanne Simard made a groundbreaking discovery that challenged everything we thought we knew about how forests work. While studying managed forests in British Columbia, she noticed something puzzling: when birch trees were removed to promote the growth of valuable Douglas firs, the firs did not flourish as expected, they actually struggled and grew more slowly.
Determined to understand why, Simard traced the movement of nutrients using radioactive carbon isotopes. What she found was astonishing. Trees were actively sharing resources through vast underground fungal networks known as mycorrhizae. These delicate, thread-like fungi connect the roots of different trees across the forest floor, forming a complex web that allows the exchange of carbon, water, nutrients, and even chemical signals, sometimes between entirely different species.
She discovered that older, larger trees often serve as central "hubs" or "mother trees," supporting younger saplings by redistributing vital resources and helping the entire ecosystem remain resilient. When these key trees are removed, the underground network weakens, and the health of the remaining forest declines.
Simard’s research overturned the traditional Darwinian view of forests as battlegrounds of ruthless competition. Instead, she revealed a far more sophisticated reality: forests operate as highly cooperative systems where trees communicate, support one another, and even warn neighboring trees about threats like drought, disease, or insect attacks.
What appears to the human eye as a silent, still forest is, in truth, a vibrant, interconnected living network, built not on isolation and rivalry, but on deep connection and mutual aid.
In Denmark, McDonalds workers make $25 an hour and, if they are over twenty, the company starts paying into a pension plan for them, and in addition they have a full 6 weeks of paid vacation.
Now how much do you think this costs customers? The Economist looked into this and found out that the Big Mac costs 76 cents less than it does here.
Don't believe the lies that raising the minimum wage would force prices to go up.
Moth from the genus Phalera
It looks like a fragment of twig complete with chipped bark and even the layering of wood tissue at the “cut” ends
perfectly resembling a broken piece of wood to avoid predation.
📹Bart Coppens/ coppensb
Uncut grass keeps the ground at around 19.5°C
Grass cut to 10 cm raises the ground temperature to about 24.5°C
Bare ground in the middle of summer rises to over 40°C
It's important to raise awareness #NoMowMay
A microscopic tardigrade, also known as a water bear, walking across a glass slide.
Extremely resilient, it can survive decades without food or water and are the only known animal that can survive in direct exposure in space.
[📹 Tobin Sparling]