(Source: youtube.com)
Island Rope Bridge, Sapa,Vietnam
photo via yourea
Richard Heeks - Popping Bubbles
“What happens when we fall in love is probably one of the most difficult things in the whole universe to explain. It’s something we do without thinking. In fact, if we think about it too much, we usually end up doing it all wrong and get in a terrible muddle. That’s because when you fall in love, the right side of your brain gets very busy. The right side is the bit that seems to be especially important for our emotions. Language, on the other hand, gets done almost completely in the left side of the brain. And this is one reason why we find it so difficult to talk about our feelings and emotions: the language areas on the left side can’t send messages to the emotional areas on the right side very well. So we get stuck for words, unable to describe our feelings.”
— Evolutionary psychologist Robin Dunbar on what happens in your brain when you fall in love (via explore-blog)
(Source: msyumyumsogood)
Luke Jerram: Glass Microbiology
- T4-Bacteriophage
- Enterovirus 71 (EV71), one of the major causative agents for hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD)
- H1N1 “Swine Flu” detail
- H5N1 “Avian Flu”
- E. coli
- Malaria
- Human Papillomavirus detail
Autumn Waterfall, Loretto, Kentucky
photo via lucy
Nine minutes of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake, which caused the deadly Japanese tsunami and Fukushima nuclear disaster, recreated in 3D-printed resin by Luke Jerram.
(via The Finch and Pea)