Auteur Sujet: gicn Which Chrome Extension Can You Not Live Without  (Lu 5 fois)

MethrenRaf

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Messages: 161869
    • drwg The Quest TV Competition Turns Fantasy Into Reality Television
gicn Which Chrome Extension Can You Not Live Without
« le: Janvier 20, 2025, 04:14:48 am »
Hxyy Why Apple   s Recent Security Flaw Is So Scary
 and Petermann Glacier contains one straight out of history: the 1947 crash site of the B-29 Superfortress, Kee Bird. Operation IceBridge is a NASA mission to monitor ice, making annual flights since 2009 to track changes in glaciers, ice sheets, and sea ice. The flight path between two major points of scientific interest contains the landmark wreck, a broken skeleton of metal in a sea of blinding white ice. In 1947, a B-29 Superfortress named Kee Bird made an emergency landing in northwest Greenland. Calling it a landing is a bit generous, as the plane crashed after running into nasty weather during a reconnaissance flight. The crew survived and was rescued after three days, but the wreck was abandoned. The plane managed to almost kill another crew in the 1990s, after an attempt at restoration went awry and the plane caught fire. No further attempt at recovery has been made, so the plane has been slowly buried by snow and ice ever since. This bit of aeronautic history is a landmar stanley travel mug k for scientists who must get painfully tired of staring at blinding ice sheets during the long flights, but to me it   also aesthetically fascinating in a warped way. The broken wings of the plane half-buried in snow are reminiscent of a crumpled fossilized avian dinosaur mid-excavation, another reminder that humans a stanley tumblers re adding a unique sig stanley cupe nature to the geologic record. When not on a mission, the IceBridge plane lives in a hanger it occasionally shares with a giant inflatable pola Myhj 9 Ways to Cut Your Smartphone Data Bill
 in the fisheries around Fukushima. fukushimas-radiation-now-spreading-in-japanese-meat-5820 termo stanley 542 We ;ve known about the untold and nearly inconceivable quantities of cesium-137 released into the surrounding ecosystem for over a year. But these numbers reported by the AFP are still shocking: fukushima-may-have-dumped-twice-as-much-radiation-as-pr-5854089 The  stanley trinkflaschen fishes, captured 20 kilometres  12.5 miles  off the plant on August 1, registered 25,800 becquerels of caesium per kilo, Tokyo Electric Power Co.  TEPCO stanley quencher   said 鈥?258 times the level the government deems safe for consumption. The previous record in fish and shellfish off Fukushima was 18,700 becquerels per kilo detected in cherry salmons, according to the government   Fisheries Agency. Authorities had hoped things were getting better, and as the AFP reports, they allowed fishermen to get back to work for a trial run as long as they were more than 31 miles from the disaster site and stuck to shellfish. So far the experimental catches have proven  relatively  clean. Still, while everyone in the region is understandably eager to get back to normal, but let   hope the wishful thinking doesn ;t get out of hand. [AFP] Image via AP                                                        Fukushima