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#University of Washington
athleticperfection1 · 23 days
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Washington Gymnastics
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ncaapeaches · 2 months
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@emily.innes26 on Instagram
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University of Washington, in bloom. 2024.
This will be one of MANY cherry blossom posts. I apologize ahead of time.
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dreamingwithneopets · 5 months
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made this with my neopets for my van lmao
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eopederson2 · 1 month
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Cherry blossoms on the Quad, gloomy March day, University of Washington, Seattle, 1991.
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majorsarcasm842 · 7 months
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Roommate : why are you screeching?!
Me: Ice king taught at my college…
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Sweet Mother Suz in adventure time style threw me. I def would have made room in my schedule to take his class. I also wonder if the AT universe suz Starbucks has the same crazy long lines
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gentleincubuss · 11 days
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Taking in the cherry blossoms in Seattle
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pauldavidgibson · 5 months
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Autumn colors on the University of Washington campus Seattle, WA November 2023
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blastofsports · 9 months
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Harold Warren Moon (born November 18, 1956) is an American former professional football player who was a quarterback for 23 seasons. He spent the majority of his career with the Houston Oilers of the National Football League (NFL) and the Edmonton Eskimos of the Canadian Football League (CFL). In the NFL, Moon also played for the Minnesota Vikings, Seattle Seahawks, and Kansas City Chiefs. Moon is considered one of the greatest undrafted players in NFL history.
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Washington Gymnastics
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ncaapeaches · 27 days
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taylor.russon on Instagram
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Duckin' around University of Washington, Seattle.
2024.
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wamnak · 11 months
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sitting-on-me-bum · 1 year
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A blobfish, also known as a flathead sculpin (Psychrolutes phrictus), hovers in the caldera at Axial Seamount, approximately 300 miles off the Oregon coast. There are nine species of blobfish, all members of the Psychrolutes genus which live deep in the sea.
PHOTOGRAPH BY NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION-OCEAN OBSERVATORY INITIATIVE/UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON/CSSF
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elenitrack · 8 months
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Lauren Bays and Grace Zilbert (Washington Huskies)
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New biodegradable plastics are compostable in your backyard
We use plastics in almost every aspect of our lives. These materials are cheap to make and incredibly stable. The problem comes when we're done using something plastic—it can persist in the environment for years. Over time, plastic will break down into smaller fragments, called microplastics, that can pose significant environmental and health concerns. The best-case solution would be to use bio-based plastics that biodegrade instead, but many of those bioplastics are not designed to degrade in backyard composting conditions. They must be processed in commercial composting facilities, which are not accessible in all regions of the country. A team led by researchers at the University of Washington has developed new bioplastics that degrade on the same timescale as a banana peel in a backyard compost bin. These bioplastics are made entirely from powdered blue-green cyanobacteria cells, otherwise known as spirulina. The team used heat and pressure to form the spirulina powder into various shapes, the same processing technique used to create conventional plastics. The UW team's bioplastics have mechanical properties that are comparable to single-use, petroleum-derived plastics.
Read more.
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