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#el nino
you-need-not-apply · 5 months
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Just in case you aren’t all aware. This isn’t fucking normal. This doesn’t happen. This is climate change causing extreme weather events to happen more frequently and with more power.
Be aware and stay safe. Do what you can to help!
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sherrylephotography · 8 months
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My photography @sherrylephotography
September 2023
It won't be long
Before all the flowers are gone
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misspygmypie · 27 days
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Nando attending LFC training today omg 🥹🫶
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aceoffangirls · 7 months
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YAYYYY (she said sarcastically)
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souriadraws · 1 year
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ponku-po · 2 months
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Busy Worker's Handbook to the Apocalypse - Sam Hall
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arhitectul · 4 months
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o parte din mine nu crede-n durere.
El Nino feat. JO - PENTRU LINISTE 
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reasonsforhope · 1 year
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“As remote as they were beautiful, the coral reefs around the 5 volcano tips making up the Southern Line Islands dazzled National Geographic explorers in 2009 during a visit.
Remarking that they re-painted the image of what a pristine coral reef looks like—bursting with color and life—the team of the Pristine Seas Expedition had been crushed when a record-warming even in 2015 called El Niño caused mass coral die offs.
Then a return in 2021 revealed a remarkable scene—bright healthy corals teeming with life as far down as 100 feet off the island slopes. After record numbers of coral deaths, a team member estimated their populations averaged around 43 million to 53 million coral colonies per square mile.
The Southern Line Islands belong to the Pacific island nation of Kiribati, and Enric Sala, a marine biologist and member of Pristine Seas, detailed that it took longer to reach them by plane and boat than it took the astronauts of the Apollo missions to land on the Moon...
“The reef was covered by light-blue corals that looked like giant roses—a garden of Montipora aequituberculata stretching as far as I could see,” says Sala.
Since the Southern Line Islands are so remote, no one was keeping an eye on how the corals were able to regrow so significantly, but Sala has an idea. Since most of the montipora were the same size, it’s possible that one or two massive coral spawning events, where they reproduce and launch their eggs out into the sea before the larvae rain back down on the reef, are enough to repopulate large areas of dead corals.
Its resilience earned it the moniker of a “super reef” among the crew...
Kiribati’s government has ensured that these seas, which have never seen large-scale commercial fishing, will never see it, and now make up the Southern Line Islands Marine Protected Area (SLIMPA).” -Good News Network, 12/7/22
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thifiell · 8 months
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taylorhawkins · 2 years
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hawkins being an absolute lunatic (and cracking dave and himself up) for 2 min and 45 seconds enjoy
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aphroditesknife · 1 day
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via SAKA Facebook page
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villanellecter · 6 months
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THIRTY FUCKIN' SEVEN DEGREES CELSIUS IN SÃO PAULO RIGHT NOW WHAT. THE. FUCK.
IT'S NOT EVEN SUMMER!!!
it's so over.
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misspygmypie · 23 days
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🥰 two kings in one picture 🫶
Can we also talk about how sharp Nando looks?!?
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kp777 · 1 year
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Ocean temperatures are off the charts right now, and scientists are alarmed - CNN
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nonesuchrecords · 2 months
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The Metropolitan Opera announced its 2024–25 season, including the Met premiere of composer John Adams's latest opera, Antony and Cleopatra, on May 12, 2025. The adaptation of Shakespeare's drama stars soprano Julia Bullock, following her company debut in Adams's El Niño this April, as Cleopatra, opposite bass-baritone Gerald Finley's Antony. Adams himself conducts a new staging by director Elkhanah Pulitzer. Read more here.
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