Clathrus archeri is commonly known as octopus stinkhorn, or devil’s fingers, is a fungus indigenous to Australia and New Zealand, and an introduced species in Europe, North America and Asia. In Britain this amazing fungus is usually known as Devil’s Fingers, and in parts of the USA it is referred to as the Octopus Fungus. Source: CP
Wednesday, 30 May 2018
Wednesday, 23 May 2018
Birds are Gems of Mother Nature
No doubt Birds are Gems of Mother Nature. Almost every human like Birds and had a desire to see colorful birds in their courtyar or outside. In this video you can see some of best Birds recorded in the camera.
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Birds
Tuesday, 22 May 2018
The Astonishing Strokkur Geyser, Iceland
In the land that gifted English the word Photo Volcanica “geyser,” Strokkur is one of the most impressive. Strokkur is a fountain geyser located in a geothermal area beside the Hvítá River in Iceland in the southwest part of the country, east of Reykjavík and erupt every five to ten minutes or so. It is one of Iceland’s most famous geysers and its usual height is 15 to 20 m, sometimes erupt up to 40 m high. Strokkur is belongs to Haukadalur valley where various geothermal features such as mud pools, fumaroles and other geysers are located around it, such as the famous Geysir geyser. Source: CP
Monday, 21 May 2018
Sunday, 20 May 2018
Thursday, 17 May 2018
Sea Lion Caves in the Oregon Coast of U.S.
Sea Lion Caves are a connected system of sea caves and caverns open to the Pacific Ocean in the U.S. state of Oregon. They’re are located 11 miles north of Florence and 400 miles Oregon Coast. In this region area Highway 101 follows a steep and undeveloped seascape 300 feet above sea level. Lichens, algae, and mineral stains cover the cavern walls with greens, pinks, purples, buffs, and reds on the rough surfaces, few of which are named Lincoln’s Head, the Indian Maiden, and The Goddess of Liberty.
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USA
Tuesday, 15 May 2018
Greater Blue Eared Starling, The Gorgeous Mystery Bird
The greater blue-eared starling or “greater blue-eared glossy-starling”
(Lamprotornis chalybaeus) are so spectacular to look at that the birder
totally forgets about all identification clues as soon as he or she gets
her bino’s onto the bird. The bird adopts seasonal migration and common
species of open woodland bird. When you see this bird, first you’ll
look at his eyes, a vivid and psycho looking orange eye captivate your
notions for a while.
Friday, 11 May 2018
Unalaska, The Town of Violent Bald Eagles
The magnificent bald eagle is the national bird of America, but most Americans are lucky to see one first-hand during their lifetimes. The Unalaska town offers classic examples of the striking nature you’ll find throughout Alaska, but seems otherwise unremarkable. Then there’s the unnatural amount of eagles here is due to Unalaska simply being a great place for the birds to score food. The Town Unalaska is located on Unalaska Island and neighboring Amaknak Island in the Aleutian Islands off mainland Alaska.
Source: CP
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United States
Thursday, 10 May 2018
Coin Whising Trees of England
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England
Pando The World’s Oldest Living Organisms
The Pando or “The Trembling Giant” is a massive grove of quaking aspens that takes the “forest as a single organism” metaphor and literalizes it. Although, the grove is a single organism, roughly 47,000 trees are genetically similar having single root system. However, various trees spread through flowering and sexual reproduction; quaking aspens normally reproduce asexually, by sprouting new trees from the expansive lateral root of the parent. So, with their smooth white bark, intense black markings, and tall, thin trunks, aspens are some of the most striking and graceful trees, special varieties possess a very surprising quality. Source: CP
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United States
Mehrangarh Fort, Jodhpur Rajasthan
Mehrangarh Fort is also known as “Mehran Fort” located in Jodhpur,
Rajasthan. The foundation of the Mehran fort was decided on 12 May 1459
by Rao Jodha on a rocky hill 9KM to the south of Mandore. Rao Jodha,
previously known as “Marwar” founded Jodhpur in 1459. He was one of
Ranmal’s 24 sons and became the 15th Rathore ruler. The fort rising
perpendicular and impregnable from a rocky hill that itself one of the
most magnificent forts in India. Still run by the Jodhpur royal family,
Mehrangarh is packed with rich history and legends.
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India
Bridegroom’s Oak The World’s Most Romantic Postbox
In Germany a 500 year old tree called “The Bridegroom’s Oak” in the Dodauer Forst forest near of Eutin, has its own postal address and actually receives about 5 to 6 letters every day. The letters are sent by love seekers from all over the world, in the hope of someone will read them and write back. In the modern age of dating apps, social media available today, but love seekers still sending letters to this amazing tree, in the hope of finding their love. To sending the letter to charming tree and expecting good fortunate to work would be a really magic. The tree trunk has a circumference of 16 ft, a spread of 98 ft, and a height of 82 ft.
Monday, 30 April 2018
El Tatio, The Third Largest Geyser Field in the World
Head into the Andes Mountains of northern Chile and you’ll find “El Tatio” a geyser field at 4,320 meters above mean sea level. El Tatio is among the highest-elevation geyser fields in the world, and has more than 80 active geysers, making it the largest geyser field in the southern hemisphere and the third largest in the world.
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Chile
Jigokudani Monkey Park, Where Monkeys Bath in Hot Springs
Jigokudani is a valley surrounded by steep rock walls where steam can be seen rising from natural hot springs. Jigokudani Monkey Park, is famous due to massive population of wild Japanese snow monkeys, using natural spa exclusively by themselves. These are also referred to Japanese macaques “Macaca fuscata”, in Yamanouchi, Shimotakai District, Nagano Prefecture, part of the Joshinetsu Kogen National Park, located in the valley of the Yokoyu-River, in the northern part of the prefecture.
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Japan
Monday, 16 April 2018
Kerið Crater, A Volcanic Crater Lake in Iceland,
Kerið, is a volcanic crater lake located in the Grimsnes area in South
Iceland. It is also known as Kerith or Kerid, a popular tourist
attraction due to scenic route Golden Circle. There’re number of crater
lakes in the Iceland’s Western Volcanic Zone, which includes Reykjanes
Peninsula and The Langjökull Glacier. It is one of several crater lakes
in the area, known as Iceland’s Western Volcanic Zone, which includes
the Reykjanes peninsula and the created as the land moved over a
localized hotspot, but it is the one that has the most visually
recognizable caldera still intact.
This is a 55 m deep explosion crater
that harbours a small green lake in the Grímsnes region, filled with
water; steep circular slopes resemble an ancient Amphitheatre. The
crater is nearly 3000 years old, often displaying intense colors. The
caldera is well composed of a red and black volcanic rock. The caldera
is approximately 180 feet deep, 560 feet wide, and 890 feet across.
Kerið’s caldera is one of the three most recognizable volcanic craters.
However, the other two surrounding volcanic are Seyðishólar and Kerhóll
half the age of this.
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Iceland
Valley of Balls Kazakhstan
The valley of balls or Torysh, as it’s called in Kazakh, is located at the Northern tip of the Western Karatau, close to the town of Shetpe in Western Kazakhstan. The area consists of plentiful ball-like rock formations strewn across a wide range of steppe land. The balls sizes are vary, but most of them are 3 to 4 meters in diameter. So far, the phenomenon is not properly researched, however various geological explanations from mega-spherulites crystalline balls formed in volcanic ash and exposed by weathering to cannonball concretions.
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Kazakhstan
Thursday, 12 April 2018
The Mysterious Bolton Strid, UK
In England somewhere between Barden Tower and Bolton Abbey in Yorkshire, lies one of nature’s most mysterious booby traps. Although it’s a small innocuous-looking mountain stream, around 6 feet across, famous as “Bolton Strid”, or simply the “Strid”. Nonetheless underneath the water’s surface is a deep chasm with commanding undercurrents that pulls anyone that falls into it to sure death. Therefore, it is strongly believed that not a solitary person who has fallen into the “Strid” has ever come out of it alive. Not even their bodies as well. To be sure, it is well believed that the name “Strid comes from the word “stride”.
The human nature assume, they can jump the creek, walk across in the stone, or even wade through it, so most of time, the attempt gets in vain and they lost in Strid. The extravagant attempt means; there are just dozens of corpses down there, pinned to the walls of the underground chasms, waiting for you to join them. It looks all stupid and harmless, but the second your foot touches the surface, you get some bullshit drowning animation and die instantly.
Labels:
Mysterious Things
Wednesday, 11 April 2018
Spruce or Picea
Spruces are tall, fast growing
evergreen trees with symmetrical spire shapes. You can distinguish them from
firs, which they resemble, in two ways; spruce needles can be rolled between
the fingers, whereas the needles of the fir and hemlock feel flat, and spruce
cones hang from the branches rtehr than sit on top of them. A spruce is a tree
of the genus Picea of about 35 species of coniferous evergreen trees in the
family Pinaceae, found in the northern temperate and boreal (taiga) regions of
the Earth.
Colorado spruce “Picea pungens”
is a popular tree with a classic Christmas tree shapes and smell. On healthy
specimens, the branches extend all the way to the ground in dense, graceful
layers. Blue spruce “P. p. Glauca” is a very widely grown though the needles of
blue spruce have a bluish cast, bu the degree of blueness varies from one tree
to another. Spruces are large trees, height varies from 60–200 ft) tall when
mature, and can be distinguished by their whorled branches and conical form.
Kosteer blue spruce is also called
Argentea is a more dependable true blue than most varieties. While spruce “P.
glauca” likewise forms a tall dense spire with a bluish cast. The variety “Conica”
dwarf Alberta spruce is a striking tree, growing slowly to 10 feet in a soft
fuzzy, pale green cone and excellent accent plant. Norway spruce whose
botanical name is “Picea abies” literally mean spruce fir forms a broad dense
dark green pyramid with distinctive upward lifting branches and dropping side
branches.
It too is a massive tree that can
be out of scale next to a home, but there are several small ornamental
varieties of this spruce. However, the “Nidiformis”, (Bird’s Nest Spruce),
which grows to a mere 3 feet with a flat top. All the spruces mentioned are
hardy to zone 2. Well, if you want to grow spruce, then to counteract their
tendency to lose their lower branches, give spruces plenty of sun, and don’t crowd
them. Scientists have found a Norway spruce, which reproducing through
layering, has reached an age of 9,550 years and is claimed to be the world's
oldest known living tree.
Moreover they will tolerate heat
or cold and most soils, including dry ones, but the soil should be well
drained. Norway spruce likes a bit more fertility and moisture. Norway and
Colorado spruce can be planted bare root. Pests include spruce gall aphids,
spider mites and scale; dormant oil sprays can be effective against all of
them. It is difficult to prune large spruce trees without ruining their shape.
Spruce is useful as a building
wood, used for many purposes, ranging from general construction work and crates
to highly specialized uses in wooden aircraft, indoor drywall framing. Moreover
it’s material also used in soundboards for a lot of musical instruments,
including guitars, mandolins, cellos, violins, and the soundboard at the heart
of a piano and the harp. Wood used for this purpose is referred to as tonewood.
They can be trained to one leader
while young awkward branches can be cut to a side branch if necessary. But for
the most part pruning consists only of removing dead branches. DNA analyses have
shown that traditional classifications based on the morphology of needle and cones
are artificial. Spruce has been found in the fossil record from the early Cretaceous,
136 million years ago. Spruces are used as food plants by the larvae of some
Lepidoptera moth and butterfly species, also used by the larvae of gall
adelgids (Adelges species).
Labels:
Spruce or Picea
Tuesday, 10 April 2018
The Magical Spotted Lake, Canada
Spotted Lake is a saline endorheic alkali lake draws countless visitors
from around the world located near the city of Osoyoos in British
Columbia Canada. The Lake has rich of minerals such as magnesium
sulfate, calcium and sodium sulphate and contains extremely high
concentrations of minerals such as silver and titanium. In summer, Lake
Water evaporates leaving behind colorful mineral deposits. The
ameoba-shaped Spotted Lake, changes colors throughout the year and
during the summer time divides itself into white, green, blue and yellow
pools. It is said that the lake has the highest natural concentration
of this mineral in the world.
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Canada
Wednesday, 4 April 2018
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