“Fire Tornado” in Brazil. (via @ryanpthompson) Ya know, a “Fire Tornado” is not something I ever want to experience in real life. Call me crazy, but it seems…bad.

The sinkhole in Guatemala is horrifying and terrible. And just wait until we see what comes out of it. MONSTERS. You heard it here first. Monsters.
via @twyst:

telegantmess:

zuky:

curate:

Above, this photo just posted to the Guatemalan Government’s Flickr feed shows a massive, spontaneous sinkhole (“hundimiento”) that appeared today in Zone 2 of Guatemala City, after overwhelming saturation of rains from tropical storm Agatha. (via Guatemala: First, volcanic eruption; then, devastating tropical storm - Boing Boing + unburyingthelead + atomische)

Damn, looks like aliens took a biopsy of the Earth’s crust in an urban environment, pulling out a clean plug o’ planet.

O.O

The sinkhole in Guatemala is horrifying and terrible. And just wait until we see what comes out of it. MONSTERS. You heard it here first. Monsters.

via @twyst:

telegantmess:

zuky:

curate:

Above, this photo just posted to the Guatemalan Government’s Flickr feed shows a massive, spontaneous sinkhole (“hundimiento”) that appeared today in Zone 2 of Guatemala City, after overwhelming saturation of rains from tropical storm Agatha. (via Guatemala: First, volcanic eruption; then, devastating tropical storm - Boing Boing + unburyingthelead + atomische)

Damn, looks like aliens took a biopsy of the Earth’s crust in an urban environment, pulling out a clean plug o’ planet.

O.O

Deep sea worm that release glow-bombs when disturbed. (via @alejandrobot) Read the whole story  at NYTimes.com.
“Attached to segments near the head, these tiny organs — more blobs than sticks, actually — can be released from the body, instantly producing a bright green bioluminescence that lasts for many seconds as the worms swim away.”

Deep sea worm that release glow-bombs when disturbed. (via @alejandrobot) Read the whole story at NYTimes.com.

“Attached to segments near the head, these tiny organs — more blobs than sticks, actually — can be released from the body, instantly producing a bright green bioluminescence that lasts for many seconds as the worms swim away.”