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Take your mind off the debate for a moment and enjoy this view of the Pillars of Creation, courtesy of the Hubble Space Telescope.
Eikoh Hosoe - Pesqui http://ift.tt/1YKpwou
closely related to sharks but with long, flat bodies and wing-like pectoral fins, mobula rays are ideally suited to swooping through the water - here off the gulf of california - yet seem equally at home in the air, so much so that they have earned the name “flying rays”. mobula rays can reach heights of more than two metres, remaining airborne for several seconds.
mobula rays are quite elusive and difficult to study, so biologists are not quite sure why they jump out of the water. theories vary from a means of communication, to a mating ritual (though both males and females jump), or as a way to shed themselves of parasites. they could also be jumping as a way of better corralling their pray, as seen with them swimming in a circular formation.
what is known about mobula rays is that they reach sexual maturity late and their investment in their offspring is more akin to mammals than other fishes, usually producing just a single pup after long pregnancies, all of which makes them extremely vulnerable to commercial fishing, especially as a species that likes to come together in large groups.
Making of the Sunny Pilot
And you’re standing here beside me I love the passing of time Never for money Always for love https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o9gK2fOq4MY&feature=share
A roll of film from Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining. Emilio D’Alessandro rememembers: “These strips are from the early prints of the film, and Stanley screened them to check on the quality of the laboratory’s work.”
Photo taken from Stanley Kubrick and me, the compelling memoir of Emilio D'Alessandro, personal assistant to Stanley Kubrick for thirty years. A collection of heartfelt private memories spanning from A Clockwork Orange to Eyes Wide Shut, Stanley Kubrick and me is a unique biography offering a completely different perspective on an extraordinary modern artist. Featuring more than 50 never-before-seen photographs.
Stanley Kubrick and me, a book by Emilio D’Alessandro and Filippo Ulivieri, Arcade Publishing, May 2016.
Read excerpts and reviews at www.emiliodalessandro.com.
(by Jordan_Ography)
“It’s been proven by history: all mankind makes mistakes.”
Moonrise Kingdom (2012) dir. Wes Anderson