I was about to step down from the top step of my staircase but my toe got caught in my pant leg and I nearly fell down the stairs and died.
do you see why I don’t wear pants now? DO YOU SEE?
When I move out and have a place to myself, the first rule I’d have (apart from “You don’t talk about fight club”) would be “no pants beyond the front door”.
It just solves so many problems.
Coheed And Cambria have revealed they have finished recording their new album which is expected to be released later this year. Check out an update from the band below by clicking “Read More”
wew!
barkbarkbarkbarkbarkbarkbarkbark:
I feel yall
YOU KNOW IF WE ALL JUST MET UP
Scientists are interested in extremes. The biggest and smallest, slowest and fastest tend to tell us more about the ultimate rules and limitations that govern all of life than the middle-of-the-road. During a recent trip with the research vessel R/V Knorr, scientists found something remarkable. Drilling sediment cores from the bottom of the North Pacific Gyre, a huge system of currents between North America and Asia, they found bacteria living life as slowly as possible.
Normally, oxygen penetrates only a few centimeters or decimeters down into the seabed. These bacteria, however, were living off oxygen more than twenty meters below the seafloor. There’s very little of either oxygen or organic material for the bacteria to live off, so in order to survive, they must live so slowly that they’re barely alive at all. The researchers measured carbon oxidation and assumed that this corresponds to the bacteria’s oxygen comsumption. By counting the number of cells and measuring the oxygen concentration, they could calculate roughly how slowly the bacteria metabolize. This tapered off at 10-3 femtomoles per cell per day, which equals only seven oxygen molecules per second. That is unbelievably slow. The results were consistent over many core samples from varying conditions, suggesting to the researchers that “these microbial communities may be living at the minimum energy flux needed for prokaryotic cells to subsist.”
The reason the oxygen penetrates so deep is that the sedimentation process is very slow. The bacteria in the deepest layers packed a lunch box while dinosaurs still roamed Earth, and they’re still living off it, as new organic material is unlikely to have entered their realm since then. Since they live so slowly, it’s probable that individual cells are really, really old. This is obviously interesting because life wears down the living, and so the bacteria might have quirky adaptations to be able to repair themselves. It should be noted that no one has studied these bacteria directly, though, so we don’t know (yet) exactly how they work.
Cool!
MUSIC VIDEO: Lostprophets - We Bring An Arsenal
Weyo weyooo la la laaa la la la la la la
Bassists Look Too Bored with Mark Hoppus of Blink-182 (College Humor)
**REBLOG AND SPREAD THE WORD**
One week to go!!
The new issue of Stencil Mag is live this May 18th and you can check out the teaser front cover right here, it will feature interviews from the following: Lostprophets, Every Time I Die, We Are The Ocean, As I Lay Dying, Zebrahead, Cartel, Hit The Lights, The Story So Far, Daytrader, Halestorm, Canterbury, Don Broco,Straight Lines, 65daysofstatic, Hundred Reasons, Polar, Freeze The Atlantic, Nightlife, IronE Singleton (Main character from The Walking Dead) Dikiciyan & Velasco (Worked on the soundtrack for Mass Effect 3), Frances Sales Photography,
As well as this we have the usual CD Reviews, Film Reviews, Game Reviews and much MUCH more!
So in short, plenty of content to keep you busy as we enter the summer season!
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i love this band!