Comet Churyumov–Gerasimenko close-up

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The Cliffs of Comet Churyumov–Gerasimenko 
Image Credit: ESA, Rosetta spacecraft, NAVCAM; Additional Processing: Stuart AtkinsonExplanation: These high cliffs occur on the surface of a comet. They were discovered to be part of the dark nucleus of Comet Churyumov–Gerasimenko (CG) by Rosetta, a robotic spacecraft launched by ESA which began orbiting the comet in early August. The ragged cliffs, as featured  here, were imaged by Rosetta about two weeks ago. Although towering about one kilometer high, the low surface gravity of Comet CG would likely make a jump from the cliffs, by a human, survivable. At the foot of the cliffs is relatively smooth terrain dotted with boulders as large as 20 meters across. Data from Rosetta indicates that the ice in Comet CG has a significantly different deuterium fraction — and hence likely a different origin — than the water in Earth’s oceans. The Rosetta spacecraft is scheduled to continue to accompany the comet as it makes its closest approach to the Sun in 2015 August.

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Macaque ‘rescues’ another macaque in India

Explanation below via Brian Clark Howard of National Geographic:

“The footage, posted this week by YouTube user gadhamasti, shows an unconscious monkey that was apparently shocked by wires at a busy train station in the industrial city of Kanpur in northern India. A male companion monkey is then seen apparently trying to revive his comrade.

The monkey bites and drags the limp animal and even douses it in water. After about 20 minutes, the injured monkey revives.”

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Amazing Elephant GigaPans

If you have never explored the wondrous world of GigaPan you simply must. It uses a proprietary software to stitch together long exposure digital panorama photos in incredible detail.
You can pan and zoom in on things many meters away using the tools on the screen
WARNING: This is a real rabbit hole!
(for those of you from other lands, the phrase ‘rabbit hole’ is a reference to Alice in Wonderland and means an internet site that one can get lost in for hours)

I just went and looked up ‘Elephant’ and found these 5 among the many that search brought up:

Sunset #1 at the Okaukuejo camp waterhole in Etosha National Park, Namibia.

By Rick Park

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Sunset #2 at the Okaukuejo camp waterhole in Etosha National Park, Namibia.

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  • Elephants at Pilanesberg by Illah Nourbakhsh
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  • This series of two car roof-top shots show animals in their natural habitat and demonstrate how well their skin color and texture work at hiding them in a wide view.
  • Elephant Terrace by ted Brattstrom
  • 120318-1050x65This massive line of elephants is half of the stone terrace and entrance to another temple complex. On the far right of the pan, is the entrance – and beyond that is a “mirror” of this – with more elephants.Most elephants are bas-relief – but periodically, you’ll see groups of elephants (typically 3) emerging from the wall with heads and trunks.Mahango, Namibia by Johan
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A Re-Creation of the Chauvet Cave Will Open in April, 2015

A $67 million complex near the Chauvet will include a nearly football-field-size replica of the most remarkable panels in the original, along with a multimedia center and an exposition hall.

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Meet Gilles Tosello, one the artists who will be charged with the recreation of the Great Panel in the replica. He was not simply retracing the original images: He was drawing them freehand to maintain their natural, intuitive look. He had to try to inhabit the ancient artist’s mind and comprehend the techniques and feelings that had led to these masterpieces so long ago.

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Using metal rods and troweled-on mortar, workers meticulously re-create the walls of the original cave:

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France’s Lascaux and northern Spain’s Altamira, the other acknowledged gems of ancient cave art, have illustrated, painfully, the damage millions of visitors can inflict. Though Lascaux has been closed since 1963, it still suffers from infestations of lichen and black mold that are thought to be linked to the presence of visitors. Altamira, though reopened to very small groups in February 2014, had been closed to the public in 1977 because the carbon dioxide in the exhalations of a century’s worth of visitors had deteriorated the cave’s colorful renderings.

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http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/12/141219-chauvet-paleolithic-cave-art-paintings-france-ancient-culture/

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19 of the Most First World Problems Overheard at Whole Foods

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The “Bird,” the “Gesture,” the “One Digit-Salute,” aka: the “Finger.”

Gestural eloquence.

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Belles Femmes des Années Passées

Beautiful women of years past

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Wheeee(ls)!

It’s goin’ round…

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Far From the Madding Crowd

Getting away from it all is essential, if only in your imagination.

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It WAS my first thought when I heard about Cuba

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(via Ironic Times)

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