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#pantheon
m1male2 · 6 months
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Panteón, Roma
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whitefireprincess · 21 days
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Pantheon, Rome | Antonio Rotundo
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aurelion-solar · 1 month
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Targon Redesign - Early Explorations by Eric Canete
Soraka & Pantheon
Morgana, Kayle & the Aspect of Justice
Zilean as the Aspect of Time
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littleliterarylesbian · 9 months
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Evan Rosier who's trying to convince his sister's girlfriend to leave her for him but it's only because he wants to be legally named Evan Evans and this is the objectively funniest way to do it.
Barty, his own boyfriend, is all for the notion, Pandora, said sister, is less than amused.
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eclectic-misfit · 4 months
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your faith and path are completely valid no matter the amount of time that passed since you chose to pursue them. you don't need 14+ years of research and knowledge to consider yourself pagan.
you do not need to have had “pagan signs” since you were a kid to become pagan; you do not need to have always known paganism's existence in modern times to call yourself pagan; you do not need to look for things you did in your childhood to “justify” your path.
you can be pagan even if you spent the past years without thinking about paganism, even if your religious (or non-religious) background was so different than what you believe in now.
if you feel at home and comfortable with this path, you are pagan — no matter if you discovered it a week ago or more than four years ago.
i see you and i support you; your beliefs are valid and they cannot be taken away from you by someone else.
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illustratus · 1 year
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artesie · 10 months
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Pantheon/Fontana di Trevi, Rome, Italy. Photos by Chris Czermak.
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whereserpentswalk · 8 months
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wwprice1 · 6 months
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Thundercats Hooooo!!! Amazing upcoming cover by David Nakayama and design sheets by Drew Moss.
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nobeerreviews · 6 months
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A labyrinth, when it is big enough, is just the world.
-- Catherynne M. Valente
(Roma)
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mixterart · 5 months
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Pantheon 🔥
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m1male2 · 4 months
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Panteón, Roma
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kindnessofcrows · 6 months
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Art of Pantheon, the cult classic animated show.
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aurelion-solar · 3 months
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Artist Spotlight: Angelina Chernyak
Roles: Illustrator, Concept Artist
Twitter - Instagram
In light of Riot Games laying off 11% of their staff globally, I want to make a series of posts highlighting the portfolios of those affected, so that we can appreciate their contributions to the world of Runeterra and continue to support them. You can find a full list of those known to be affected here.
Chibi Champion Summoner Icons (sources 1, 2)
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League of Legends Emotes (sources 1, 2)
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Senna, Pantheon & Sett Ability Icons (sources 1, 2, 3)
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DRX Loading Screen Borders (source)
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Monster Tamer Summoner Icons (source)
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Updated Mastery Crests (source)
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ilumies · 1 month
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reasonsforhope · 1 year
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“When it comes to explaining Roman engineering, people looking to demonstrate their genius have a variety of use cases, but the secret to why their concrete has remained when even modern buildings crumble after just a few years of disuse has eluded scientists.
However at MIT, scientists have cracked their concrete code to show that Roman concrete was self-repairing—it could naturally close cracks in as little as 2 weeks...
Indeed, the Romans did things with concrete that modern societies haven’t—just look at the Pantheon in Rome which still has the world’s largest unreinforced concrete dome. Aqueducts built to water the city literally still do, 2,000 years and sometimes more after they were built.
It was once assumed that lime was added to concrete with water to create a paste in a process called slaking, but by using spectroscopic imaging, Masic and his colleagues at MIT, and elsewhere in Switzerland and Italy, have determined that the Romans heated the lime ash to high temperatures to create what is known today as “quicklime.”
“The benefits of hot mixing are twofold,” Masic says. “First, when the overall concrete is heated to high temperatures, it allows chemistries that are not possible if you only used slaked lime, producing high-temperature-associated compounds that would not otherwise form. Second, this increased temperature significantly reduces curing and setting times since all the reactions are accelerated, allowing for much faster construction.”
In such concrete as this, cracks that form allow the easy travel of the lime clasts into open space which, when coming in contact with water, seal and close the cracks. The team mixed their own Roman concrete and it took only 2 weeks for a deliberately inflicted crack to close.
By contrast a contemporary concrete block was made without quicklime and it never repaired itself.
As a result, the team are working to commercialize this as self-healing Roman concrete in order to reduce the 8% of global emissions attributed to the manufacture and laying of concrete in cities.” -via Good News Network, 1/9/23
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