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TimeAbandoned

@ravenheartedkid / ravenheartedkid.tumblr.com

Gave love about 100 tries, running from the demons in my mind.If they laugh? Fuck 'em all.
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Trust me to get all exited about seeing a Fantail pigeon on the roof among the feral flock in town ;W; / Of course I then proceeded to feed and stroke the feral flock that recognise me... saw the same pigeon for the 4th time in a row  different months... I think he deserves a name now. I’ll call him Greggory. After all you become what you eat!

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todaysbird

the yellow-bellied tanager (tangara xanthogastra) is a small, colorful passerine bird found in the western half of the amazon basin. they are found in subtropical and tropical forests. like other tanagers, they have a varied diet, and feed on fruits, nectar, flowers, and insects.

photo credit - oscar johnson

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ddetrimental

help me out guys. reblog this, like this. for every note, everything is pushed back a day for him. I need your help. he doesn’t believe it’s possible to help him. but it’s entirely possible, especially with your help. I know these are so sporadic and cliché to an extent along with becoming so popular on here, but please. I appreciate every single note

REBLOGGGGG LIKE YOUR LIFE DEPENDS ON IT

BREAK THE POST BREAK THE POST!!!!

REBLOG LIKE YOUR LIFE IS ON THE LINE.

this could save a life!!! i have to rb this : V

Please reblog. Break the post. Let’s hit a million and over!

I don’t know who you are, neither do I judge you, but don’t you dare feel alone. Many people care, this breaks my heart and just know I love you <3 I care <3

Source: ddetrimental
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tangledwing
A plate-billed mountain toucan (Andigena laminirostris), at the Paz de las Aves private reserve near Nanegalito, Ecuador. The country is a paradise for birdwatching, with 1,600 known species - a total of 13% of the world’s birds Photograph: Rodrigo Buendia/AFP/Getty Images
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Aquatic Prehistoric Fossils Found In The Sahara Desert. 

It is one of the driest regions of the world, receiving just a few inches of rain a year, but the bodies of whales has emerged from the shifting sands of the Egyptian Sahara Desert. The fossilized remains are helping to reveal how much of Egypt was once covered by a vast ancient ocean around 50 million years ago.

The arid landscape of Wadi Al-Hitan, which means Valley of the Whales, was once submerged beneath a vast ocean. Among its wind-sculpted sandstone buttes and cliffs, scientists have unearthed a treasure trove of prehistoric whale bones. Hundreds of fossils catch these ancient whales in the act of losing their land-legs and entering the sea. Also buried among them are sharks, crocodiles, rays, turtles, and other seafaring creatures. 

Wadi Al-Hitan, or the Valley of the Whales, boasts a fascinating collection of fossils at the bottom of an ocean called the Tethys Sea, which occupied the space in between Africa and Asia. The Valley of the Whales in Egypt is home to some of the most remarkable paleontoloical sites on Earth due to its unusual history.

The area was at the bottom of an ocean called the Tethys Sea. The whale skeletons in the region offer a glimpse into the past, as the species of whale that once called this desert valley home is now extinct. The Archaeoceti, which means ‘ancient wales’, found in Wadi Al-Hitan are some of the earliest forms of whales to have emerge. Cetaceans evolved from a land-based creature with legs, which is why many species of whale and dolphin have a phantom hip bone where the legs once attached to the body.

Paleontologists have discovered the fossil remains of the world’s biggest ocean-dwelling crocodile too buried on the edge of the Sahara, a creature that was twice the size of anything seen today and so many other aquatic fossils. Fossilized sharks, whales and plants have allowed paleontologists to build a picture of the ecology of the lost ancient ocean. 

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