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#forest and trees
charmed-n-zesty · 4 months
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captainhysunstuff · 4 months
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22 more images below the cut (Warning: Less than moral discussion ahead):
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Light leads L to a particular stretch of woods that he calls "neutral ground" and demands to hear L's conditions for him to work with Kira. L tries to explain in a way that will convince Light to accept his assistance. It appears to be successful...
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Big Disclaimer here: I, personally, don't condone the "Kira Plan" in any way, shape, or form. I don't even believe that there is a "correct" way to enact it. I am very firmly on the "Anti-Kira" and "Light is a Tragic Character with Bad Coping Mechanisms/Self Delusion" teams. I don't want to spoil too much of what's left of this story, but I do have a plan/explanation in the future~.
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tofreezetime · 8 months
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where my mind goes quiet and instict takes over
where I forget that I am a human
I only know that I exist
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raspberrykraken · 1 year
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The one page problem. This can apply to anything be it game design or writing because formally we all have been taught to brainstorm on one page, especially when it formally comes to outlining.
But in the same breath people religiously speak of the dark fear of "feature creep" that leaves you stuck in a forest without seeing the trees of your game doing anything.
So after sleeping on my problems I realized I was doing the one page problem in trying to fit the whole game into one. When in reality its okay have more, to have more purpose with more as long as your holding onto things that make sense.
I haven't changed the core but realizing shoving everything into one makes it too crowded/too much going on. If it was more linear that wouldn't be a problem. But sometimes it's okay not to shove everything into one. Also its okay to have a "vision" and steer around it. Everyones timetable it seems is to push things out asap but not take the time to really hone in on things. That's just my current observation when looking over game dev videos from different creators.
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victusinveritas · 3 months
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Meet Pando, not a forest but a single tree. Every trunk of the Quaking Aspen is genetically identical & connected by a single 80,000 year old root system, making it one of the largest and oldest living entities on Earth!
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expressions-of-nature · 3 months
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Wistman's Wood, Dartmoor by Dr Stanislav Edward
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kaelula-sungwis · 1 month
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Kareaara Stream Cascade, Tangoio Falls Reserve
flickr
Kareaara Stream Cascade, Tangoio Falls Reserve by Jos Buurmans Via Flickr: The first part of the track towards the Te Ana Falls and the Tangoio Falls in northern Hawke's Bay follows a stream that meanders through the native forest . In some areas, the stream makes its way through moss-covered rocks and boulders, creating beautiful cascades of water.
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nicthechameleon · 2 months
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Forested landscape
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phdguides · 2 months
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why choose Ph.D. Guides?
wa.me/+919340282643
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90377 · 1 month
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Chasing the fog somewhere in Switzerland by @90377
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charmed-n-zesty · 3 months
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stephiramona · 5 months
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reasonsforhope · 2 months
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"A century of gradual reforestation across the American East and Southeast has kept the region cooler than it otherwise would have become, a new study shows.
The pioneering study of progress shows how the last 25 years of accelerated reforestation around the world might significantly pay off in the second half of the 21st century.
Using a variety of calculative methods and estimations based on satellite and temperature data from weather stations, the authors determined that forests in the eastern United States cool the land surface by 1.8 – 3.6°F annually compared to nearby grasslands and croplands, with the strongest effect seen in summer, when cooling amounts to 3.6 – 9°F.
The younger the forest, the more this cooling effect was detected, with forest trees between 20 and 40 years old offering the coolest temperatures underneath.
“The reforestation has been remarkable and we have shown this has translated into the surrounding air temperature,” Mallory Barnes, an environmental scientist at Indiana University who led the research, told The Guardian.
“Moving forward, we need to think about tree planting not just as a way to absorb carbon dioxide but also the cooling effects in adapting for climate change, to help cities be resilient against these very hot temperatures.”
The cooling of the land surface affected the air near ground level as well, with a stepwise reduction in heat linked to reductions in near-surface air temps.
“Analyses of historical land cover and air temperature trends showed that the cooling benefits of reforestation extend across the landscape,” the authors write. “Locations surrounded by reforestation were up to 1.8°F cooler than neighboring locations that did not undergo land cover change, and areas dominated by regrowing forests were associated with cooling temperature trends in much of the Eastern United States.”
By the 1930s, forest cover loss in the eastern states like the Carolinas and Mississippi had stopped, as the descendants of European settlers moved in greater and greater numbers into cities and marginal agricultural land was abandoned.
The Civilian Conservation Corps undertook large replanting efforts of forests that had been cleared, and this is believed to be what is causing the lower average temperatures observed in the study data.
However, the authors note that other causes, like more sophisticated crop irrigation and increases in airborne pollutants that block incoming sunlight, may have also contributed to the lowering of temperatures over time. They also note that tree planting might not always produce this effect, such as in the boreal zone where increases in trees are linked with increases in humidity that way raise average temperatures."
-via Good News Network, February 20, 2024
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the-fae-can-have-me · 3 months
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nikswonderland · 6 months
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the season of golden trees & mystery
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