Forwarded from The Chad Pastoralist
Celtic chariot from Bull Rock Cave dating to the 6th century BC.
❤4
Forwarded from 🐶Dog’s of New York
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Wtf 😳 ?
Forwarded from Old and New European Art and Aesthetics
Germanic Warrior With Helmet. (1902). Osmar Schindler (German 1867-1927).
❤3
Forwarded from Wakingup1984
Why You Shouldn’t Use Conditioner After a Nuclear Attack
“We do not believe a domestic nuclear event is remotely plausible. Nor do we believe a deliberate nuclear event in Europe is at all likely,” … Nevertheless… here’s what you need to know. […]
ARTICLE
“We do not believe a domestic nuclear event is remotely plausible. Nor do we believe a deliberate nuclear event in Europe is at all likely,” … Nevertheless… here’s what you need to know. […]
ARTICLE
Foreign Policy
Why You Shouldn’t Use Conditioner After a Nuclear Attack
Individuals can only do so much if the worst happens—but the government’s response is a mystery by design.
👍1
Forwarded from Wakingup1984
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Project Dribble | A Nuclear weapons test in Mississippi
This video covers 'Project Dribble'. A series of two nuclear tests performed underground inside of a southern mississippi salt dome in the mid-1960s in order to test seismic patterns of underground weapons tests. #projectdribble
This video covers 'Project Dribble'. A series of two nuclear tests performed underground inside of a southern mississippi salt dome in the mid-1960s in order to test seismic patterns of underground weapons tests. #projectdribble
Forwarded from Wakingup1984
Photos from the day when US government nuked Mississippi, 1964
Mississippi’s Tatum Salt Dome in rural Lamar County near Hattiesburg was the site of two nuclear test explosions in the mid-1960s.
The Salmon test on Oct. 22, 1964 and the Sterling test on Dec. 3, 1966, were conducted to help determine whether and how nuclear test yields could be disguised through “decoupling” and how well such blasts could be detected. #projectdribble
LINK
Mississippi’s Tatum Salt Dome in rural Lamar County near Hattiesburg was the site of two nuclear test explosions in the mid-1960s.
The Salmon test on Oct. 22, 1964 and the Sterling test on Dec. 3, 1966, were conducted to help determine whether and how nuclear test yields could be disguised through “decoupling” and how well such blasts could be detected. #projectdribble
LINK
Forwarded from Wakingup1984
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Nuking Mississippi: Remembering the 1964 Nuclear Test
Tom Breshears, 68, remembers the underground nuclear blast on October 22, 1964,near his home in Purvis, Mississippi. #projectdribble
Tom Breshears, 68, remembers the underground nuclear blast on October 22, 1964,near his home in Purvis, Mississippi. #projectdribble
Forwarded from Wakingup1984
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Atomic, Mississippi: 50 Years Later
#projectdribble
A pair of underground nuclear tests rock a remote Mississippi town, leaving residents concerned over lingering radiation. 50 years later, questions remain unanswered.
SOURCE • Read more HERE
#projectdribble
A pair of underground nuclear tests rock a remote Mississippi town, leaving residents concerned over lingering radiation. 50 years later, questions remain unanswered.
SOURCE • Read more HERE
👍1