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JadaMeetsWorld !

@jadameetsworld / jadameetsworld.tumblr.com

Ig: jvdac_
SC: j.jadaaa
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What patterns have y’all noticed in the people you tend to attract or be attracted to ? 

They don’t want me lol

🥲🥲🥲🥲

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I love a man that always wants to hug up on you and kiss you for no reason like yesssssssss baby come hereeeee 😩😩😩😩😩😩😩😩😩😩😩😩😩😩😩😩😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍

My absolute favorite 🥺💕 … I’m just waiting on god to bless me with 1

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biophonies

ah, i’m so bad at posting here. acknowledging this Day of Mourning from the lands of Kiikaapoi, Peoria, Potawatomi, Myaamia & Ochethi Sakowin people, aka Chicago, derived from a native word for garlic (mmm…) which is really suitable for me because I live here now 🌱🧄✨

whose.land are you on? talk about it over dinner this weekend with your fam & what it means to give the #landback. considering everything, listening & learning from indigenous people is the least you can do.

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reblogged

Skeleton Lake

Roopkund Lake, in the Indian Himalayas, is frozen for much of the year. But in warmer months it delivers a macabre performance, earning the nickname Skeleton Lake. After the lake melts, hundreds of skeletons (some with flesh still attached) begin to emerge. 

At first it was thought that all these people died simultaneously in a catastrophic event, but recent studies on the remains upended that theory. Studies showed that there wasn’t just one mass dumping of the dead, but several, spread over a millennium.

Further genetic analysis by researchers (particularly researchers Niraj Rai and David Reich) showed that the remains were mostly South Asian, East Asian, and Eastern Mediterranean and that a lot of the remains appeared hundreds and even a thousand years apart. Chemical signatures from the skeletons indicate that the individuals had significantly different diets, adding support to the notion that several distinct population groups are represented. Their sample size (they studied 38 different remains) also showed that none of the people were related.

None of the research has answered how and why all these remains got here. There’s no evidence of bacterial infections, so an epidemic was probably not to blame. Perhaps the challenging high-altitude environment proved fatal. Currently Skeleton Lake’s mystery remains unexplained.

SOURCE (def recommend reading the full story)

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