Forwarded from SciFi World (Clif High)
Ice Age. It's here... https://www.nature.com/articles/s41561-021-00699-z
Nature
Current Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation weakest in last millennium
Nature Geoscience - The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) is currently distinctly weaker than it has been for the last millennium, according to a synthesis of proxy records derived...
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Ras Ben: Part 1, The Magi Is Magnetic • https://youtu.be/pT08Nlm88Ak • https://t.me/IntuitiveEarth/2112, https://t.me/IntuitiveSpace/302, https://t.me/IntuitiveEmergent/2407
Forwarded from 🔊 @EuphonicEXOpolitic • Resonant Kindness, Exopolitic • Euphonic Light Network Reception Broadcast • IPR •°`
🌞💨🌏 All-in-one space weather report
May 10th 2022, 2:30AM UTC
May 10th 2022, 2:30AM UTC
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Ras Ben: Part 2, The Magi Is Magnetic • https://youtu.be/zfJjjevsWLg • https://t.me/IntuitiveEarth/2122, https://t.me/IntuitiveSpace/312, https://t.me/IntuitiveEmergent/2411
Forwarded from Divine Surrender
"The sand in Okinawa, Japan contains thousands of tiny "stars". These "grains of sand" are actually exoskeletons of marine protozoa, which lived on the ocean floor 550 million years ago.
A 1mm star!
On the beaches of Okinawa in Japan, the sand is mostly made up of foraminifera, a one-celled organism that feeds on the minerals found in sea salt.
You just have to take a handful of sand and look at it with a magnifying glass to realise that the grains are pretty little stars.
The same goes for Bermuda, where they also take on a pinkish colour due to algae.
These little stars are neither animals nor plants, and have been present on earth for 500 million years. These are not true starfish in the literal sense of the word, but protozoa, a mineral shell that can take many forms depending on the species, including a star. Their size generally varies from 38 mm to 1 mm."
Jain108 academy
A 1mm star!
On the beaches of Okinawa in Japan, the sand is mostly made up of foraminifera, a one-celled organism that feeds on the minerals found in sea salt.
You just have to take a handful of sand and look at it with a magnifying glass to realise that the grains are pretty little stars.
The same goes for Bermuda, where they also take on a pinkish colour due to algae.
These little stars are neither animals nor plants, and have been present on earth for 500 million years. These are not true starfish in the literal sense of the word, but protozoa, a mineral shell that can take many forms depending on the species, including a star. Their size generally varies from 38 mm to 1 mm."
Jain108 academy