Geobulletin alpha
News from the Geoblogosphere
New from Snet: Lithologs, a new tool to create lithological/sedimentological logs online..
Friday, 19 August 2022
One reason I got a new micro computer is because the old one at the tv was being flaky. When I was fiddling with it, Linux wasn't finding the network card, even though 'lspci' was seeing it.In my massive amount of reading I did to try and get my zoneminder working again, there was a mention of the coin battery. Crap! I haven't bothered with that for years. All my motherboards had
Most reading this are familiar with the life cycle of a butterfly. An egg is laid on its host plant, the egg hatches into a caterpillar, the caterpillar eats the plant, the caterpillar forms a chrysalis, and then an adult butterfly emerges to continue the cycle. It’s easy to think of the plants in this […]
The post Passionvines | A Passion for Survival first appeared on
He aims to connect theory and research with practical solutions to effect
Nothing is permanent, but good enough. They've made it almost all the way to South America, thus wiping out the only chance for a warm spot. This will leave the masses sputtering on what to do about the [...]
The skulls of many dinosaurs had bumps, crests or horns for display, scaring rivals and impressing potential mates.Instead of the sharp nose horn of many of their large plant-eating cousins, Pachyrhinosuaurs [...]
The end of the road...with a lava lake in the distance. I should really rename this blog to something a bit more representative of my posts, how about "travelling the world with a UV camera"? The location this [...]
Time for all of us to remember the 70's and early 80's, the years of real winter. It's early 80's. I saw a Olivia Newton John concert. Got married. The town of Cornwall still stunk with the paper [...]
Hawaii Reckoning (Michaela "Dželena" Jelenová)
Aunque estemos en época estival, nuestra ronda mensual de ilustraciones dinosaurianas no falla a su cita y aquí tenemos buena magra artístico-mesozoica [...]
Hans-Dieter Beeger & Werner Quellmalz, 1965. Geologischer Führer durch die Umgebung von Dresden. (Theodor Steinkopff) Dresden:
Ads: