Milky Way over Graveyard Fields
by Spencer Black
You're blog is amazing! Thanks for sharing! Also do you know how the northern lights work? I don't understand them. I also don't really know anything about them other then they are gorgeous.
So yeah, first of all, that’s what the Northern Lights are: Auroras or Geomagnetic Storms. They happen at the North and South poles and are called the Aurora Borealis and Aurora Australis prospectively. More specifically they usually happen between 3 and 6 degrees of latitude from 10-20 degrees from either pole. Of course, conditions depending they can be in other locations.
But what conditions, and how the heck do these mystical lights work?
So let’s just start off by talking about Earth… Like deep inside the Earth actually, not in the sky. So earth has all these layers of rock, then a mantle, then this outer core that’s liquid and an inner one that’s solid.
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He just woke up
Globemaster
1. Remember, feelings of panic are just exaggerations of normal bodily stress reactions. 2. Sensations are neither harmful nor dangerous - just unpleasant. Nothing worse will happen. 3. Stop adding to the panic with frightening thoughts of where panic will lead. 4. Stay in the present. Be aware of what is happening to you rather than concern yourself with how much worse it might get. 5. Wait and give the fear time to pass. 6. Notice that when you stop adding to panic with frightening thoughts, the fear begins to fade. 7. Focus on coping with facing the fear rather than trying to avoid it or escape from it. 8. Look around you. Plan what you will do next as the panic subsides. 9. Think about the progress made so far, despite all the difficulties. 10. When you are ready to go on, do so in an easy, relaxed manner. There is no hurry. Each time you cope with panic, you reduce your fear! Source: http://www.panicsupport4u.com/coping.htm
awsome history
70 years ago today, on June 6th, 1944 the Western Allies’ armies landed in the Normandy region of France, beginning their push through Europe for Germany that would, combined with the Soviet onslaught from the east, result in the fall of Nazi Germany within the next year.
In 2014, as we approach the 70th Anniversary of the D-Day invasion, Peter Macdiarmid returned to the invasion grounds to photograph the locations of some iconic - and lessor known - images from the Allied invasion. Presented here are some of the “Then” and “Now” photographs.
“Mulder, you’re rushing me out of the room. You got a girl coming over?” “What’s a girl?” 1.11 Eve