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chocolateandwhiskey:

i wanna have thissss wah

chocolateandwhiskey:

i wanna have thissss wah

(via m0rtality)

discoverynews:

Was Earth a Migratory Planet?
By all accounts Earth should be a “snowball planet” like the frigid world Hoth in the 1980 Star Wars film “The Empire Strikes Back.”
Why? Because common theories of stellar evolution predict that the sun was only 70 percent of its current brightness when it first lit its fusion engine 4.5 billion years ago. The sun has been steadily growing brighter since then and will continue so into the future, eventually evaporating away Earth’s oceans.
keep reading

discoverynews:

Was Earth a Migratory Planet?

By all accounts Earth should be a “snowball planet” like the frigid world Hoth in the 1980 Star Wars film “The Empire Strikes Back.”

Why? Because common theories of stellar evolution predict that the sun was only 70 percent of its current brightness when it first lit its fusion engine 4.5 billion years ago. The sun has been steadily growing brighter since then and will continue so into the future, eventually evaporating away Earth’s oceans.

keep reading

(via smashysmash)

i want a black house when i grow old.

i want a black house when i grow old.

(Source: habitualsomething, via helainetieu)

(via m0rtality)

chocolateandwhiskey:

i wanna have thissss wah

chocolateandwhiskey:

i wanna have thissss wah

(via m0rtality)

(via m0rtality)

(Source: m0rtality, via m0rtality)

(via m0rtality)

discoverynews:

Was Earth a Migratory Planet?
By all accounts Earth should be a “snowball planet” like the frigid world Hoth in the 1980 Star Wars film “The Empire Strikes Back.”
Why? Because common theories of stellar evolution predict that the sun was only 70 percent of its current brightness when it first lit its fusion engine 4.5 billion years ago. The sun has been steadily growing brighter since then and will continue so into the future, eventually evaporating away Earth’s oceans.
keep reading

discoverynews:

Was Earth a Migratory Planet?

By all accounts Earth should be a “snowball planet” like the frigid world Hoth in the 1980 Star Wars film “The Empire Strikes Back.”

Why? Because common theories of stellar evolution predict that the sun was only 70 percent of its current brightness when it first lit its fusion engine 4.5 billion years ago. The sun has been steadily growing brighter since then and will continue so into the future, eventually evaporating away Earth’s oceans.

keep reading

(via smashysmash)

i want a black house when i grow old.

i want a black house when i grow old.

(Source: habitualsomething, via helainetieu)

About:

18. Boyfriend. Love space, galaxies and star nuseries and shit. Tea. Beer. ALICE. Planet earth. Nature. lovelovelove. Nudity. Bodymod. Oh and my name is Shireen.

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