Dlpi Aliens recreated with puppets Game over, man!
The 20-year-old UARS satellite has dropped out of orbit鈥攁s old satellites are wont to do鈥攁nd
stanley cup uk is reentering the atmosphere. T
stanley quencher oo bad NASA can ;t pinpoint where鈥攐r when鈥攅xactly it will land. Could be the middle of the Pacific, could be the middle of Paris鈥攊t a surprise! If you have to leave your house on or around September 24th, remember to keep one eye on the skies. The Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite UARS is currently hurtling in at 5 meters per second and is expected to land somewhere between the 57th latitudes鈥攖hat 57 degrees north and 57 degrees south of the equator鈥攚hich only covers 8230;most of the world populated areas. Shit. Luckily, most of the satellite is expected to break apart and burn up before it touches terra firma. Unluckily, the UARS still has only a 1 in 3,200 chance of striking a populated area鈥擭ASA normal safety protocols limit that probability to 1 in 10,000. Apparently you are more likely to be killed via fall
vaso stanley ing satellite than you are by a bear wearing a ballerina outfit. [BBC] You can keep up with Andrew Tarantola, the author of this post, on Twitter, Facebook, or Google+. NASAsatellitesSpace Gyqf Microsoft Gave Nokia $250m in The Fourth Quarter of 2011 For Adopting Windows Phone
Add another piece of evidence from the animal kingdom that same-sex bird couples can be just as responsible 鈥?and romantic 鈥?as hetero birds. First there were the gay penguins who raised a baby together, now there are the gay zebra finches who mate for life.
https://gizmodo/gay-penguins-hatch-and-raise-a-penguin-baby-5277663 According to a paper published in the latest issue of Be
stanley cup havioural Ecology and Sociobiology, these finches are just as dedicated and loving as heterosexual members of their species. The findings support the notion that relationships in animals can be more complicated than just a male and a female wh
stanley vaso o meet and reproduce, even in birds said UC Berkeley Julie Elie, whose previous observations of commonly heterosexual behaviors in male-male finch pairs led her to conduct the study. To examine the finches ; behavior, Elie and her colleagues raised finches in same-sex groups. Given previous observations, the team was unfazed when they found that more than half of the birds not only courted and paired off with a finch of the same sex, but exhibited signs that they had fully bonded as a couple 鈥?engaging in such public displays of affection as perching side by side and greeting one other with a nuzzling of beaks. In the second half of their study, however, the researchers proved that these same-sex couples
stanley cup were just as monogamous as their heterosexual counterparts. When Elie and her team introduced novel females into a group of bonde