when you planned for a 15 minute nap and wake up 4 hours later pic.twitter.com/CLofAeHtgm
— Up Top Culture (@UpTopCulture) June 29, 2019
via Twitter https://twitter.com/UpTopCulture
June 30, 2019 at 05:21AM
Geologist by education & Curious by nature ... attempting to make this blog my social media hub .... Posts would be mainly about #Space #Science #Sports #Travel #Geology #Geophysics #Beauty ;-)
when you planned for a 15 minute nap and wake up 4 hours later pic.twitter.com/CLofAeHtgm
— Up Top Culture (@UpTopCulture) June 29, 2019
Here's a demonstration that concave mirrors invert images pass their focal point
— Fermat's Library (@fermatslibrary) June 30, 2019
more here: https://t.co/wWfNngJuZo pic.twitter.com/5X5rSmfJW8
Refraction pic.twitter.com/RNydzhVXXb
— Universal-Sci (@universal_sci) July 1, 2019
Pro...skimming pebbles pic.twitter.com/FVct5r0T7f
— Dr. Kash Sirinanda (@kashthefuturist) June 30, 2019
**What is your greatest fear?**
— ScratchpadMD (@scratchpadMD) June 29, 2019
ER doc: “The CT scanner being broken”
IM intern: “I’m locked out of UpToDate”
Surgery resident: “My ego isn’t stroked q2h”
Allergy/Immunology fellow: pic.twitter.com/UXCk4M3Vnr
🔥 Cows trying to scare Canada goose 🔥 pic.twitter.com/PWBhZa8A6K
— Nature is Lit🔥 (@NaturelsLit) June 29, 2019
This #infographic ranks the 20 biggest bankruptcies in US history. Lehman Brothers rule supreme. Interesting list of retailers that recently went bust is located at the bottom of the graphic. Source: https://t.co/E9T6GGKL01 pic.twitter.com/p6e2nWiebM
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) June 29, 2019
For those following TSLA, this is using units from the group that follows deliveries expertly. Based on that and ASPs not as bearish as I've seen, production economics this quarter (2% deliveries to lease customers): pic.twitter.com/V5UCZyXs93
— Prints of Whales Value Trap (@Valuetrap13) June 28, 2019
What happens in your head when you do 27×48?
— grodaeu (@grodaeu) June 28, 2019
Haven’t posted a #ThinSectionThursday for a while 😔 so I’ll share one of my latest obsessions: silica-undersaturated rocks! A haüyne tephrite with extra-blue haüyne phenocrysts 💙🔬 (4X, scale bar 0.5 mm) pic.twitter.com/2s5geUR30B
— Lapilli (@Lapilli_55) June 27, 2019
“We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking that created them.” pic.twitter.com/HF2GGueqrf
— Vala Afshar (@ValaAfshar) June 27, 2019
My wife and I welcomed a little baby into the world this morning!
— Mark Tingay (@CriticalStress_) June 28, 2019
While the baby is having a snooze, here is a special mini #MudVolcanoOfTheDay thread on the birth of another little baby mud volcano, born off Pakistan on the 26th November 2010.
Image: @NASAEarth pic.twitter.com/BGcuJLJHnl
New changes at #Krakatoa caldera.
— Annamaria Luongo (@annamaria_84) June 27, 2019
A part of Varlaten Island, the island at W of #AnakKrakatau volcano🌋, either is burnt or has been covered by ash, probably during the phreatomagmatic eruption of 2days ago.
True and false colour images acquired today, 20190627, by #Sentinel2. pic.twitter.com/RsmyT28Ilx
When you slice a rock thin enough light can pass through it like a window. A geological microscope brings the mineral to life.
— Dr Tim Gregory (@TimCosmos) June 27, 2019
This is a meteorite called Kapoeta that is made from fragments of rock shattered into shards by impacts on its parent asteroid. #ThinSectionThursday pic.twitter.com/1rTknQK1Ut
Jony Ive will still work with Apple, but it will require a special adapter https://t.co/siPlD8BuTF
— Hrishikesh Hirway (@HrishiHirway) June 27, 2019
The most popular #socialmedia networks each year, gloriously animated
— Roberto Alonso González Lezcano (@robertoglezcano) June 27, 2019
pic.twitter.com/9cukHAIlZZ
BREAKING: NASA just announced that we are going to Titan!! *screams with joy*
— Shannon Stirone (@shannonmstirone) June 27, 2019
I've got the breaking news and more on this incredibly exciting mission for you here: https://t.co/hpUpW3DWdS@sciam
“It isn’t that they cannot find the solution. It is that they cannot see the problem.” pic.twitter.com/HF2GGueqrf
— Vala Afshar (@ValaAfshar) June 26, 2019
some biotite gneiss for #ThinSectionThursday from North Rona hopefully getting some in situ zircon zapping tomorrow :) (FOV 3 cm) pic.twitter.com/bAZm9076nF
— tectonictweets (@tectonictweets) June 27, 2019
#thinsectionthursday
— micROCKScopica (@micROCKScopica) June 27, 2019
Gypsum-rich horizons of carnian age (230 million years) at the base of the dolostones of "Dolomia Principale" formation.#dolomites @DolomitesUNESCO @AcquaDolomia #geology #rocks #minerals #abstractart pic.twitter.com/MguX9wPjVW
This is the Jurassic coral 'Thecosmilia Annularis' it's approximately 150 million years old and comes from the Jurassic Coast. I found this a couple of years ago and have done around 20 hrs prep to get this nice 3D example. There's still a little to do... it's my best fossil! pic.twitter.com/obBj3RlOos
— Jurassic Coast Guide (@jurassicguides) June 27, 2019
This afternoon, @SuperclusterHQ photographer @erikkuna returned to Pad 39A with #SpaceX to collect our remote cameras.
— Supercluster (@SuperclusterHQ) June 25, 2019
What you're seeing is the fire and fury of the Falcon Heavy's 27 Merlin engines igniting to generate 5 million pounds of thrust. pic.twitter.com/CBVBzJSUek
Some lunchtime procrastination revealing some lovely braided (delta top?) channels. Dip direction is towards the NW. Surface showing variance. pic.twitter.com/Xa88lVEziB
— Timothy Wigan (@TimothyWigan) June 26, 2019
Every now and then it’s nice to remember this Orangutan’s reaction to some sleight of cup.pic.twitter.com/V5g2N9Azdw
— Pete Firman (@petefirman) June 25, 2019
This is a 'Crinoid' death bed from the Jurassic Coast... this is a fossil of a marine creature that is closely related to starfish and sea urchins. It's common name is called a 'sea lily' but it is not a plant as the name suggests. It's approximately 190 million years old! pic.twitter.com/uNRC0ZCAB0
— Jurassic Coast Guide (@jurassicguides) June 26, 2019
Chaotic nature of submarine mass movements: are they really chaotic or we can't image them properly? Pic 1 is imaged w/ conventional HR MCS seismic and pic 2 w/ @Ifremer_fr in house deeptowed seismic equipment #SYSIF find out yourself! Processing credits @_Toun_ #masswasting pic.twitter.com/tAPiypwIrd
— Shray Badhani (@shraybadhani) June 26, 2019
The history of WiFi
— Brian Rosen (@brosen23) June 25, 2019
full graphic here:https://t.co/gkJYkwfXWN pic.twitter.com/vqNHuFK934
"How deepwater projects have bounced into economic relevance is a story worth telling." -Simon Flowers, Chief Analyst and Chairman for @WoodMackenzie https://t.co/ZCaez2jwCV
— Raphael Portela (@RaphaelPortelaC) June 24, 2019
A Seismic Rant, by Geophysichick:
— Jackie Caplan-Auerbach (@geophysichick) June 25, 2019
Rather annoyed, as I prepare my class on seismic waves for tomorrow. Nearly every website I find has a subtle but maddening error in how they discuss the speed of seismic waves. [A rant, but hopefully an educational rant, follows]
Three Falcon Heavy rockets have now launched. Seven cores have return safely. So, seven of nine. I guess center core landings are not a piece of cake. pic.twitter.com/RyEj2rSNIx
— Eric Berger (@SciGuySpace) June 25, 2019
Hugely well-deserved praised for the rigorous, nonpartisan, actionable research that @AdeleCMorris has been doing for many years now on carbon pricing (and much more) 🙌 https://t.co/DWhsPfLh7T via @EENewsUpdates
— Jason Bordoff (@JasonBordoff) June 25, 2019
A short clip from our launch video. Look at the magnificent interaction of the side booster plumes during Boostback burn! #SpaceX #FalconHeavy #STP2 @SpaceX @NASASpaceflight pic.twitter.com/5q31vF8ei4
— Chris G - NSF (@ChrisG_NSF) June 25, 2019
There goes #LightSail2! Precisely 7 days after its release from the #FalconHeavy, the front door of Prox-1’s CubeSat dispenser, called a P-POD, will swing open and allow a large spring to nudge LightSail 2 out into space. https://t.co/MPxkacujvz
— Planetary Society (@exploreplanets) June 25, 2019
👏 THEY 👏 CAUGHT 👏 THE 👏 FAIRING 👏
— SpaceXFleet Updates (@SpaceXFleet) June 25, 2019
1.5 years, 3 sets of arms, 4 nets, countless drop-tests and trials, 2 oceans, 1 rename, 5 failed attempts. SpaceX finally nailed it.
Wow. Just... wow. pic.twitter.com/wEwUuARMeB
Dual night booster landings.
— Kerbal Space Academy (@KSpaceAcademy) June 25, 2019
Is it just me, or are the booms louder at night?
Full clip:
📽https://t.co/Fau90RD3m6@NASASpaceflight @RocketJockeys pic.twitter.com/QkMqfQ32p2
Wow, wow, wow!
— John Kraus (@johnkrausphotos) June 25, 2019
SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy rocket launched the STP-2 mission at 2:30am this morning. The two side cores, flying their second mission, returned to land successfully at Cape Canaveral.
It was incredible. Simply incredible. pic.twitter.com/wCgj06k8sk
Starlink orbit raising mostly complete at the expected 550 km altitude. Also, satellite 44 (AV) has now stopped its descent and is maintaining a 400 km orbit. pic.twitter.com/t3FX1vcaMR
— Jonathan McDowell (@planet4589) June 24, 2019
7/n Now let me give you core meaning or “Bhawartha”:
— Aabhas Maldahiyar | आभास मलदहियार🇮🇳 (@Aabhas24) June 24, 2019
आकाश में जिन ग्रहों-उपग्रहों की गति नष्ट होती देखी जाती है, वे पैंतीस हैं। आरम्भ सृष्टि में सारे ग्रह-उपग्रह रेवती तारा के अन्तिम भाग पर अवलम्बित थे, वे ईश्वरीय नियम से गति करने लगे, रेवती तारे से पृथक् होते चले गये।
👀 We finally have footage of a giant squid in U.S. waters, and boy is it eerie https://t.co/im1rOqSPWK pic.twitter.com/HT6tyfOFw4
— Popular Science (@PopSci) June 24, 2019
If you think we should attack Iran for its links to Al Qaeda then surely you favor nuclear annihilation of Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Qatar, the UAE.
— Max Abrahms (@MaxAbrahms) June 25, 2019
CHART OF THE DAY: Deepwater #oil projects are paying back a lot quicker than a decade ago (and discovery-to-production is shorter) as deepwater slims down to compete with U.S. #shale, according to @WoodMackenzie research | #OOTT pic.twitter.com/Tla5JMnThf
— Javier Blas (@JavierBlas) June 24, 2019
I surely understand a lot of the negative commentary on shale E&Ps now. But I also understand they're running a business model that was established when prices were 2-4 times higher. That's really tough in any industry. @RTDukes @wrbailey8 @gushercapital @laurablewitt
— Robert Clarke (@RobertClarke_WM) June 24, 2019
The bees are currently humming a B3 note. Here is the latest hive audio spectrum. pic.twitter.com/3ps4MoMpdo
— Bee Hive (@RoboHiveTweets) June 24, 2019
A composite photo of the position and phases of the moon over 28 days, each photo taken at the same exact location each day.
— Sony Kapoor (@SonyKapoor) June 22, 2019
Photo: Giorgia Hofer Photography pic.twitter.com/iMo8Xfe9vA
A perfect kahuna ... 😊💗 pic.twitter.com/uaCr4u2Xnd
— Scott Hefti ☘ (@Havenlust) June 24, 2019
So quietly it came and went: the 75th anniversary of the greatest battle ever fought by the Indian Army to defend the country from an invading force – the battle of Imphal and Kohima. (1/2) pic.twitter.com/C1A9soWIpM
— Raghu Karnad (@rkarnad) June 24, 2019
Visible #gold (and cosalite) in core. #geology #mineral pic.twitter.com/g0mdYCdGIx
— Colin Bateman (@BC_Geo) June 22, 2019
Astronauts must weigh themselves regularly in space. But the device they use to do so on the @Space_Station, is completely different from the scales we use on Earth.@Astro_DavidS shows us how astronauts weigh themselves in microgravity. #DareToExplore
— CanadianSpaceAgency (@csa_asc) June 22, 2019
📹: CSA/NASA pic.twitter.com/7teQfuVZDs
Sunrise at Mount Kailash pic.twitter.com/MPiCdgUyxI
— indianhistorypics (@IndiaHistorypic) June 24, 2019
BOOM!
— Mark Tingay (@CriticalStress_) June 23, 2019
A Special Two-For-One #MudVolcanoOfTheDay and #SaltSaturday thread on the HUGE Bledug Kuwu mud volcano in Central Java!
This thread has LOTS of absolutely stunning images from the awesome volcano photographers @xflow and @OysteinLAnderse.
Video from @OysteinLAnderse pic.twitter.com/11nZBxLzhK
So they exceeded more than 33% of the money allotted during Vote of Accounts last year and now want to delay salaries to govt employees to cover it.
— V. Anand | வெ. ஆனந்த் (@iam_anandv) June 23, 2019
Cooking GDP has these knock down effects because revenue and expenditure estimates are measured as a % of GDP internally. pic.twitter.com/njr1svW8UY
NASA hacked because of unauthorized Raspberry Pi connected to its network
— Catalin Cimpanu (@campuscodi) June 21, 2019
- hack discovered in April 2018
- intruder described as "an advanced persistent threat"
- stole 23 files, 500MB of data, including data on Mars missionshttps://t.co/lau6vzJRte pic.twitter.com/Unaoc1iD3c
The timelapse imagery of Chennai's disappearing reservoirs is mind boggling. That's roughly 3 billion cubic feet of water gone in less than a year https://t.co/NcwvYkNrcr pic.twitter.com/hEdu7SXOCC
— Brian L Kahn (@blkahn) June 21, 2019
— Anthony Evans (@UNCLEVO34) June 21, 2019
And there’s still a gender pay gap. pic.twitter.com/2gnauST9ND
— Chad Loder ✸ (@chadloder) June 22, 2019
Tobe Zoo in Aichi conducted a lion escape drill today.
— Spoon & Tamago (@Johnny_suputama) June 22, 2019
Note the expression on the actual lions faces.
pic.twitter.com/azuJYQhLCw
This clip (slowed down 8x) shows the motion of a helicopter's blade in a typical forward flight phase. You can notice the blade pitch change and the motion of the damper weights https://t.co/3DnZIJGLUG [more: https://t.co/Sv6EpOhNsi] pic.twitter.com/YX7TqY4D3c
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) June 22, 2019
How big is Softbank?
— Paras Chopra (@paraschopra) June 21, 2019
"The overall group has ¥15.7tn ($143bn) of interest-bearing debt and ¥27tn of total liabilities, far greater than its ¥11.6tn market cap."
Softbank has $150 billion of debt, and its liabilities is more than its market cap. https://t.co/rq6cVHDbQh
When Saudi Arabia escalated against Iran in Yemen, Iran escalated against Saudi Arabia.
— Max Abrahms (@MaxAbrahms) June 21, 2019
When the United States escalated against Iran, Iran escalated against the United States.
I'm beginning to see a pattern.
The fractal nature of these stunning tidal channels is just awesome. Here zooming in from estuaries several km wide to channels just a few meters wide. pic.twitter.com/oP1LV2S5m1
— Mark Tingay (@CriticalStress_) June 21, 2019
Happy #Summer!
— micROCKScopica (@micROCKScopica) June 21, 2019
Charoite schist (Yakutia) with some "strange" interference #colors. #geology #rocks #minerals #crystals #gemstones #jewels #scicomm #sciart #wallart #abstractart #SummerSolstice2019 pic.twitter.com/4Zudn7sXad
I've shared this before, but I still quite like it... and it just appeared in print. Global ocean circulation on a spilhaus projection, emphasising the connectivity of the global ocean, and the central role of the Southern Ocean within that. https://t.co/fogQFOyAS4 pic.twitter.com/0ApwDot5cc
— Michael Meredith (@meredith_mmm) June 20, 2019
Acha chalta hoon,
— Vijay Kedia (@VijayKedia1) June 21, 2019
Duaaon mein yaad rakhna.
Sare GDP ka zubaan pe hisab rakhna.😉 pic.twitter.com/aHRlSHwNh7
At the rate I am now convinced I have been breathing all wrong pic.twitter.com/fpyRCRTdwm
— Proxcey ✪ (@ItsProxcey) June 18, 2019
When people say that Hindus need to be more aggressive, rigid, hierarchical, violent and intolerant to 'save' Hinduism, I realise they want Hinduism to be less Hindu and more..... well you know 😀
— Devdutt Pattanaik (@devduttmyth) June 21, 2019
#thinsectionthursday
— micROCKScopica (@micROCKScopica) June 20, 2019
Experimenting with the 2/1 format for an exhibit.
How do you like this from 0 (terrible) to 10 (wonderful)?#sciart #scicomm #photography #geology #colors #microscopy pic.twitter.com/eb6HlLg73b
People who say the most extreme things with the most confidence are the most listened to.
— Ken Caldeira (@KenCaldeira) June 20, 2019
People who express nuance and uncertainty are ignored.
This is an amazing visualizations by @alxrdk showing global temperatures from 1850 to today, and different pathways we might take in the future. This definitely wins the award for best warming stripes in my book! pic.twitter.com/shYrTFFtGv
— Zeke Hausfather (@hausfath) June 19, 2019
This... who made this... pic.twitter.com/KJxU8d3rXr
— Robert Mahon (@RobertCMahon) June 20, 2019
What an amazing boy he is, God bless these children 💖 pic.twitter.com/88iyOuJvwJ
— Saru (@Saru81589968) June 18, 2019
To be clear we host major Indian bases not far from your chicken neck.
— Tenzing Lamsang (@TenzingLamsang) June 19, 2019
To be clearer China can offer 10 times more but we are only south Asian country to not go on that route.
To be even clearer we sell you dirt cheap hydro and your aid is wiped out in a yr’s trade imbalance. https://t.co/nCIcxmKgLD
Nomination for inclusion in @AwardsDarwin pic.twitter.com/DE3YjviSnt
— Safir (@safiranand) June 19, 2019
Hi @Liz_Cheney, I worked at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, where I gave tours to tens of thousands of folks, introducing them to things everyone should know about the Holocaust, things you'd know if you actually visited. @AOC is right... (thread) https://t.co/D6qirFASmf
— Charlotte Clymer🏳️🌈 (@cmclymer) June 18, 2019
Progress MS-10 core stage burns up in Earth's atmosphere.
— Seán Doran (@_TheSeaning) June 18, 2019
16 November 2018 pic.twitter.com/B6Dju0axnH
A Brazilian #Agate soon to decorate a friend's house in France.#wallart #photography #canvas #artwork #rocks #minerals #crystals #geology #sciart pic.twitter.com/oCdXzC7rGy
— micROCKScopica (@micROCKScopica) June 18, 2019
Now that is a hell of a photo of the Hong Kong protests. pic.twitter.com/KGUJtJld8K
— james crabtree (@jamescrabtree) June 17, 2019
Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 vanished into the Indian Ocean five years ago, and we still don’t know why. The explanation lies not in the sea but on land—in Malaysia, where officials know more than they dare to say. William Langewiesche reports: https://t.co/eScIuPPgTl
— Prashanth (@Prashanth_Krish) June 17, 2019
upar se tumhari manhoos commentary humari koi dua hi qubool nahi huti https://t.co/b6dAELJeQE
— A h m e d (@Ahlvled_) June 16, 2019
Hey! Physics teachers! You're welcome 👇 pic.twitter.com/sE1dTA7LZm
— Alby (@Alby) June 15, 2019
#Thinsectionthursday
— micROCKScopica (@micROCKScopica) June 13, 2019
fractured and serpentinised olivine in a peridotite from Ronda (Spain)#geology #rocks #minerals #crystals #mantle #spain #sciart #scicomm #colors #abstractart pic.twitter.com/dACbpZVtOc
A month after holes in a key database used in GDP estimation were first exposed, the controversy around #India's GDP #data and statistical system has only grown. This #thread is a summary of some answers and many questions on this issue #stats #institutions #economy (1/n)
— Pramit Bhattacharya (@pramit_b) June 12, 2019
This is very cool. A geological map from ancient Egypt that predate modern maps by almost 3,000 years! https://t.co/hxJWay4Z0q
— Ekbal Hussain (@ekh_sci) June 11, 2019
Deep Fakes are going to be everywhere
— Brian Rosen (@brosen23) June 11, 2019
Pretty terrifyinghttps://t.co/S2V12XhjvH pic.twitter.com/oJ4YnlstiS
The most annoying people are non vegetarians who keep taunting vegetarians about what they are missing out, make rude jokes about grass eaters and then proceed to also hog the single veg item served at a party or team lunches. https://t.co/0u01STG0BZ
— Chitra Narayanan (@ndcnn) June 10, 2019
Ever wondered how sensitive radio telescopes are? Here is Carl Sagan to blow your mind. pic.twitter.com/9qdikBAjPs
— Shannon Stirone (@shannonmstirone) June 10, 2019
ONGC Videsh plans to back out from the Iranian Farzad B Gas exploration and extraction project, this comes after the US is mounting sanctions and pressurising others not to do business with the nation.
— Kushal Kumar Sinha (@KushalSinha001) June 11, 2019
Late last year, Iran had offered India offer to jointly explore and extract pic.twitter.com/t9wEvQeS2p
My @IndianExpress op-ed on impact of methodological changes on India's GDP growth post 2011-12. Reported annual average growth is about 7%. I estimate it at about 4.5%. 1/n: https://t.co/op48xquHRu
— Arvind Subramanian (@arvindsubraman) June 10, 2019
When the outgoing CEA admits he allowed a 4.5% growth to be dressed up as 7 %, he casts a shadow on all data going out of India. Government must explain, maybe a white paper on GDP figures is called for. https://t.co/plvGi7jipD
— Suhasini Haidar (@suhasinih) June 11, 2019
With India fans giving Steve Smith a tough time fielding in the deep, @imVkohli suggested they applaud the Australian instead.
— ICC (@ICC) June 9, 2019
Absolute class 👏 #SpiritOfCricket #ViratKohli pic.twitter.com/mmkLoedxjr
Updated plot of orbit height vs time for Indian ASAT debris pic.twitter.com/aZeaUlZQKI
— Jonathan McDowell (@planet4589) June 9, 2019
Sunil Gavaskar. Thug life. Salaam. #dhonigloves pic.twitter.com/aqyh0c4eqw
— Jamie Alter (@alter_jamie) June 8, 2019
Map shows the historic routes of the Mississippi river. Make up your mind! This map is a good reminder how tricky building cities alongside a mighty river can be. So much conflict regarding management and adjustments of waterways... Source: https://t.co/PXTRyeH9m5 pic.twitter.com/cLRTfXfi5g
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) June 9, 2019
People hate things that contradict their deeply-held beliefs. But since ideas that contradict deeply-held beliefs are the most interesting (see the history of physics for example), anyone on the hunt for interesting ideas will tend to offend a lot of people.
— Paul Graham (@paulg) June 8, 2019
As JFK famously said, “We choose to go to the Moon not because it is easy, but because it is Mars"
— Jason O. Gilbert (@gilbertjasono) June 7, 2019
I mean, some of us have had plans to merge _Phobos_ with Mars for years now, but that’s a whole different moon.
— Alex Parker (@Alex_Parker) June 7, 2019
IT'S LEAKING (via https://t.co/vGL5W26j47) pic.twitter.com/kjgt6Oj9dd
— JoAnna (@JoAnnaScience) June 7, 2019
😻a surprise in every box! pic.twitter.com/7QYLmdvIGn
— Thomas Martin (@ThomasM_geo) June 6, 2019
BREAKING: Code 642 Alpha has been activated. The void has been located. I repeat. The void has been located. Over. https://t.co/uf18CnPVCk
— Shannon Stirone (@shannonmstirone) June 7, 2019
1/The DOE just dropped a fantastic, years in the making, 218-page update on geothermal energy in the US. The GeoVision study outlines a roadmap to generate over 16% of US electricity and heat 45 million homes from geothermal by 2050. https://t.co/SyPgqw6Ma2
— Tim Latimer (@TimMLatimer) June 6, 2019
CORRECTION: Gizmodo originally stated that drug company Mallinckrodt had jacked up the price of an anti-seizure medication from $40 in 2000 to over $40,000 today. A spokesperson for Mallinckrodt emailed to request a correction that the drug costs $38,892. https://t.co/o5NW7APhkZ pic.twitter.com/8wE3AYpMSy
— Gizmodo (@Gizmodo) June 6, 2019
Heterogeneous nucleation: Geological process in which a mineral decides "Why bother forming my own nucleus when I can just grow on the dead or dying remnants of my mineralogical cousins?". See also: Thermodynamic indolence. #ThinSectionThursday pic.twitter.com/wM4kF95fIX
— Adam Jeffery (@Agpaitic_Adam) June 6, 2019
This baby is having a full-fledged conversation with his father 😭❤️
— StanceGrounded (@_SJPeace_) June 5, 2019
This is the cutest thing ever 😍. Obsessed.
(via f/b Shanieke Pryor)
Retweet ❤️ pic.twitter.com/5ePvmx3ezo
Jupiter has rings too! Jupiter in infrared pic.twitter.com/0ckwfu11ST
— Domenico Calia (@CaliaDomenico) June 5, 2019
Amazing map! I had no idea this data was collected somewhere. The European hitchhiking map shows the average waiting times until someone gives you a lift. #Ireland #Belgium and #NL seem great places to hitchhike. Source: https://t.co/0B3d1gvxUj pic.twitter.com/tXfkcSpFLM
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) June 5, 2019
Repo Rate cut below 6% for the first time since 2010, only twice in 20 years (2007-08; 2002-03) have we been accommodative while cutting below 6%.... growth needs to be well below MPCs target for more exuberance on rate cuts?.. @dugalira @aparnaviyer02 @ananthng @andymukherjee70
— Arvind Chari (@arrychary) June 6, 2019
This is where India is in most dangerous juncture which could turn into demographic disaster...combination of almost free internet, cheap mobile devices, young population and lot of free time...
— Vivek Mashrani, CFA (@MashraniVivek) June 5, 2019
These are modern world digital drugs if not used wisely...#thoughts https://t.co/s3ODgw07TR
WTF moments in startupville: A thread.
— Leandro (@Leandro8209) June 4, 2019
Don't look at these if you're currently struggling to raise funds.
Theranos 💉
Founded: 2003
Known for: Convincing the world that all kinds of diagnostics can be read from one drop of blood.
Raised: $400 million +
Status: Deceased pic.twitter.com/z0mZcH2vyC
😍😍Amazing hybrid event beds from the Lewis ‘Shale’ in Wyoming - @ThomasM_geo is describing these for part of his @Chevron funded PhD project at @coschoolofmines. Amazing public/open data from the @USGS Core Research Center pic.twitter.com/yfdVrNMinu
— off the shelf edge (@ZaneJobe) June 6, 2019
Another Ocean Jasper (Madagascar) and its lovely spherulites.#microscopy #geology #colors #rocks #minerals #circles #crystals #gemstones #jewelery #wallart #sciart #scicomm pic.twitter.com/g5312lTOyp
— micROCKScopica (@micROCKScopica) June 5, 2019
If you're interested to see what the bed of an ice stream looks like, or in how water at the bed affects ice stream flow, look here:https://t.co/se6GYitwtL pic.twitter.com/OK2DvqnFPw
— Robert Larter (@rdlarter) June 5, 2019
Vivaldi's Four Seasons / Earth orbit / real time
— Seán Doran (@_TheSeaning) June 4, 2019
4k: https://t.co/en2hP4KlOO pic.twitter.com/Swl39dMAPy
An incredible new animation of the movement of the continents, the great ice ages & ever-changing sea levels over the history of animal life, by Christopher Scotese. https://t.co/OOd1933iIp pic.twitter.com/Fjjat40FM3
— Peter🌋Brannen (@PeterBrannen1) June 4, 2019
Over-the-counter vitamins and other supplements don't go through the same testing as prescription drugs. https://t.co/pFkBdLCkeI
— Popular Science (@PopSci) June 5, 2019
The universe's 1st minerals were nanocrystalline diamonds. What opportunities for knowledge are lost when we categorize both these cosmic travelers and the denizens of deep Earth as the same thing, asks @CarnegieGeoPhys and @deepcarb's Bob Hazen. https://t.co/pMOodZYQcf pic.twitter.com/ZaShcea561
— Carnegie Science (@carnegiescience) June 3, 2019
This spectacular night scene of the mass hunger strike in Tiananmen Square 1989 was taken by a friend of mine. He wants it to be shared, but is too afraid to reveal his name. pic.twitter.com/dlemRXY3l4
— 马建 Ma Jian (@majian53) June 4, 2019
You maybe already saw this.
— Tancredi Palmeri (@tancredipalmeri) June 4, 2019
Tennis player Mahut losing at Roland Garros in front of his family, breaks down in tears.
His kid runs on court to hug him.
His opponent Mayer getting emotional.
Father and son walk away hand in hand.
Losing, winning, living.pic.twitter.com/YOE3ohKVGJ
"The Indian peninsula has seen a drastic change in rainfall patterns over the past decade, marked by frequent droughts, floods and sudden storms." #thisisclimatechange https://t.co/s7T4yyF1aW
— Magnus Carlbring (@MagnusCarlbring) June 3, 2019
Here is the repository of concall transcripts of all major companies for last 2 years....
— Vivek Mashrani, CFA (@MashraniVivek) June 3, 2019
Link: https://t.co/rejus9kWKn
Received as forward from a friend, have uploaded the same to my Dropbox...
Happy Investing..!! pic.twitter.com/TGgZtmcZVV
Ocean Jasper aka "The Sunflower"
— micROCKScopica (@micROCKScopica) June 4, 2019
probably the best shot by micROCKScopica (so far)#microscopy #photography #flowers #colors #rocks #minerals #crystals #geology #wallart #gemstones #jewels #quartz pic.twitter.com/EGV9JBfaDW
I'm reading some comments saying that, as Starlink satellites are getting fainter to the naked eye, astronomers should stop complaining. Apart from the fact that they still flare, here's a short thread explaining why even faint satellites are an issue for us.
— Juan Carlos Munoz (@astro_jcm) June 3, 2019
The Most Powerful Arab Ruler Isn’t M.B.S. It’s M.B.Z. https://t.co/uqkm36B2pw
— Anjli Raval (@AnjliRaval) June 3, 2019
TIL that Bubble Wrap was originally invented and marketed in 1959 as... wallpaper.
— Mary Robinette Kowal (@MaryRobinette) June 2, 2019
#mineralmonday
— micROCKScopica (@micROCKScopica) June 3, 2019
Lines of Plagioclase twins#colors #microscopy #scicomm #sciart #abstractart #twins #lines #geology #minerals #rocls #crystals pic.twitter.com/6TWKHHIWKf
We wrote this piece https://t.co/XqETy09dZy
— Vasundhara Singh Sirnate (@vsirnate) June 2, 2019
The Dzhanibekov Effect pic.twitter.com/93SiXC9QUd
— Universal-Sci (@universal_sci) June 2, 2019
It never fails to blow my mind that a spacecraft took this photo. https://t.co/SmkSTT7eOp
— Shannon Stirone (@shannonmstirone) June 1, 2019
From the Hall of Fame of micROCKScopica
— micROCKScopica (@micROCKScopica) June 2, 2019
Andalusite Rainbow (Lipari, #Italy) for your #sunday! #colors #microscopy #wallart #waves #geology #rocks #minerals #crystals #gemstones #jewels #rainbow pic.twitter.com/PsLg6iWCGP
On Friday, NASA announced 3 companies have been contracted to land payloads at 3 sites on the Moon over the next few years: Mare Imbrium, Lacus Mortis, and Oceanus Procellarum. But, as far as I can tell, no one wrote anything about the geology of those sites, so let's do it.
— The Earth Story (@TheEarthStory) June 1, 2019
Charoite (Yakutia) for your #weekend!#colors #microscopy #wallart #waves #geology #rocks #minerals #crystals #gemstones #jewels pic.twitter.com/AsuodM5Iyn
— micROCKScopica (@micROCKScopica) June 1, 2019