(Source: shakedowntonight, via logicoanalogo)
(Source: shakedowntonight, via logicoanalogo)
(Source: theshallowdepths, via peano)
(Source: jesuisperdu, via vivia)
(Source: toenrthaanna, via 3nding)
the-absolute-best-gifs:dirtcrumbgoddess:
You move to an area, and you multiply, and multiply, until every natural resource is consumed. The only way you can survive is to spread to another area. There is another organism on this planet that follows the same pattern. A virus. Human beings are a disease, a cancer of this planet, you are a plague.
(Source: annadraconida, via onepercentaboutanything)
(Source: loverofbeauty, via hirop44)
Limited fungi shelf by Katharina Mischer
Tiny coccolithophores have had a big impact on the planet over time. Though they are single-celled, these photosynthesising organisms are enclosed in a mosaic, or cage, of microscopic plates that make many very beautiful to look at. The plates are made of calcium carbonate, which the coccoliths pull from the surrounding water. As these small organisms live and die in their trillions, they bequeath their tiny plates to the ocean floor where they form rocks such as chalk. Over geological time, coccoliths have removed significant amounts of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, helping to keep Earth cool as the sun grew hotter.
(via curiositasmundi)
Niccolò Ubalducci Photographer (by Niccolò Ubalducci Photographer)