themanfromnantucket - There once was a man from Nantucket...
There once was a man from Nantucket...

1782 posts

Have A Very Merry Isaac Newtons Birthday ByMatt Dawson

Have A Very Merry Isaac Newtons Birthday ByMatt Dawson

Have a Very Merry Isaac Newton’s Birthday by Matt Dawson

Secular seasons greetings to all, and to all a happy new year!

Artist website / tumblr

  • theotheroneoverthere
    theotheroneoverthere liked this · 10 years ago
  • fanatsnickersov
    fanatsnickersov liked this · 10 years ago
  • chaydiggas
    chaydiggas liked this · 10 years ago
  • jimmyjaz
    jimmyjaz liked this · 10 years ago
  • weaklung42
    weaklung42 liked this · 10 years ago
  • chorrogalactico
    chorrogalactico liked this · 10 years ago
  • screamingay
    screamingay reblogged this · 10 years ago
  • screamingay
    screamingay liked this · 10 years ago
  • frusilerias
    frusilerias liked this · 10 years ago
  • kinxz
    kinxz reblogged this · 10 years ago
  • skeptikitty
    skeptikitty liked this · 10 years ago
  • dyonys
    dyonys reblogged this · 10 years ago
  • the-dorky-daisy-blog
    the-dorky-daisy-blog reblogged this · 10 years ago
  • the-dorky-daisy-blog
    the-dorky-daisy-blog liked this · 10 years ago
  • zincstoat
    zincstoat reblogged this · 10 years ago
  • oddcooki
    oddcooki liked this · 10 years ago
  • pensamentosmundanos-blog
    pensamentosmundanos-blog reblogged this · 10 years ago
  • itzy-tw
    itzy-tw liked this · 11 years ago
  • cyanaefreya
    cyanaefreya liked this · 11 years ago
  • getting-old-er
    getting-old-er liked this · 11 years ago
  • cloudynostalgia
    cloudynostalgia liked this · 11 years ago
  • alex-eat-world
    alex-eat-world liked this · 11 years ago
  • inaworldaspsychoticasthis
    inaworldaspsychoticasthis reblogged this · 11 years ago
  • doctorskittles
    doctorskittles reblogged this · 11 years ago
  • a-woman-of-no-importance
    a-woman-of-no-importance reblogged this · 11 years ago
  • snarkyfancat
    snarkyfancat reblogged this · 11 years ago
  • insidecarloscontreras
    insidecarloscontreras liked this · 11 years ago
  • drjamie
    drjamie reblogged this · 11 years ago
  • lightbeams-and-sciencedream-blog
    lightbeams-and-sciencedream-blog reblogged this · 11 years ago
  • blogthonypostano
    blogthonypostano reblogged this · 12 years ago
  • classica-1750
    classica-1750 liked this · 12 years ago

More Posts from Themanfromnantucket

12 years ago
A Dolphin Named Flipper (or Not)

A dolphin named Flipper (or not)

Most people are familiar with the sounds that dolphins make: chirps, barks, claps and whistles. But recently, research has identified patterns in dolphins’ whistles that show similarities between the ways dolphins and humans use languages: their social usage of sound. More specifically, dolphins have names. And no, these aren’t names like “flipper” or “skipper.” They’re actually called signature whistles, and are formed by each individual dolphin within their first few months of life. These signature whistles function as a name-like identification; dolphins emit these whistles roughly nine to ten times more often than any other whistle when encountering a new group of dolphins. These signature whistles don’t just set one dolphin apart from another: through variants in the whistle, they also convey information about their moods, and other relevant details—kind of like the information humans get from the vocal tone, and inflection of the voice when someone is speaking. The discovery of signature whistles has sparked more discussion about the possibility of dolphin-human communication. Up to this point, human-dolphin communication has been pretty one-sided, humans teaching certain shapes and words to the dolphins. Now however, different groups are trying to find basic units within the dolphin “language” that they can put together, to possibly start to understand what dolphins are talking about. This could take a while, due in part to many physical differences between humans’ and dolphins’ perception of sound, but the study and cataloging of signature whistles (being compiled by Sarasota Dolphin Research) is giving us a glimpse into the social lives of dolphins, and the brief look inside of the world of proverbial dolphin Flipper looks to be quite interesting indeed.

Guest article written by Kerry (toujoursjamais.tumblr.com)


Tags :
12 years ago

Goes well with this.

A Molecular Matchmaker From The Cell By John Pfeiffer (Life Science Library 1964/1969). Dont Get Too
A Molecular Matchmaker From The Cell By John Pfeiffer (Life Science Library 1964/1969). Dont Get Too
A Molecular Matchmaker From The Cell By John Pfeiffer (Life Science Library 1964/1969). Dont Get Too
A Molecular Matchmaker From The Cell By John Pfeiffer (Life Science Library 1964/1969). Dont Get Too

‘A Molecular Matchmaker’ from The Cell by John Pfeiffer (Life Science Library 1964/1969). Don’t get too romantic about it, though—enzymes are just as good at splitting molecules up.


Tags :
12 years ago

I DONT KNOW HOW THEY’RE GETTING BACK UP BUT I’M GETTING UPSET

themanfromnantucket - There once was a man from Nantucket...

Tags :
12 years ago
Adding Some Old Pieces To My Society 6 To Satisfy Some Requests. Btw Apparently Theres This Free Shipping

Adding some old pieces to my Society 6 to satisfy some requests. Btw apparently there’s this free shipping thing they have going on ending tonight? They had a $5 off thing a little while back but shipping is more than $5 so if you want something you can save yourself some sandwich money in the process! Pretty good deal!


Tags :
12 years ago

A Health Warning: The homosexual unconsciously finds a magnetic quality in words, and derives gratification from utterances…Rhyming is a favourite method of communication among most homosexuals, especially those who practise tribadism.

- M. Chideckel Female Sex Perversion (1935)

Quotation seen on micathemineral's page

~

Some think that "the gays" are courageous.

I think they exist to enrage us.

Perfecting thier rhyme,

Their metric-al time,

And their verse - oh my god; it's contagious!

~

To be over-abundantly clear: I'm making fun of an antiquated opinion and the limerick represents a set of opinions about as far away from my own as possible (though a rhyming super power would be cool...).


Tags :