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Minimal Movie Posters India

Inspired from Minimal Movie Posters which was primarily for Hollywood, I thought why not we contribute something for Indian cinema as well being a movie lover country we are. We have more movies in so many languages pumping out everyday. So here it is. Minimal Movie Posters INDIA.

minimalmoviepostersindia:

The Burning Train [1980]
P.S.: Since Bombay Central is not VT which is now CST, so the possible excuse is that since the train went haywire, they changed the destination. #ExcusesAlwaysReady

minimalmoviepostersindia:

The Burning Train [1980] P.S.: Since Bombay Central is not VT which is now CST, so the possible excuse is that since the train went haywire, they changed the destination. #ExcusesAlwaysReady

moderation:

New Study Says Large Regions of Mars Could Sustain Life
—
The question of whether present-day Mars could be habitable, and to  what extent, has been the focus of long-running and intense debates. The  surface, comparable to the dry valleys of Antarctica and the Atacama  desert on Earth, is harsh, with well-below freezing temperatures most of  the time (at an average of minus 63 degrees Celsius or minus 81  Fahrenheit), extreme dryness and a very thin atmosphere offering little  protection from the Sun’s ultraviolet radiation. Most scientists would  agree that the best place that any organisms could hope to survive and  flourish would be underground. Now, a new study says that scenario is not only correct, but that large regions of Mars’  subsurface could be even more sustainable for life than previously  thought.
Scientists from the Australian National University modeled conditions  on Mars on a global scale and found that large regions could be capable  of sustaining life – three percent of the planet actually, albeit  mostly underground. By comparison, just one percent of Earth’s volume,  from the central core to the upper atmosphere, is inhabited by some kind  of life. They compared pressure and temperature conditions on Earth to  those of Mars to come up with the surprising results.
The paper is currently available for free here.
(via  universetoday)

moderation:

New Study Says Large Regions of Mars Could Sustain Life

The question of whether present-day Mars could be habitable, and to what extent, has been the focus of long-running and intense debates. The surface, comparable to the dry valleys of Antarctica and the Atacama desert on Earth, is harsh, with well-below freezing temperatures most of the time (at an average of minus 63 degrees Celsius or minus 81 Fahrenheit), extreme dryness and a very thin atmosphere offering little protection from the Sun’s ultraviolet radiation. Most scientists would agree that the best place that any organisms could hope to survive and flourish would be underground. Now, a new study says that scenario is not only correct, but that large regions of Mars’ subsurface could be even more sustainable for life than previously thought.

Scientists from the Australian National University modeled conditions on Mars on a global scale and found that large regions could be capable of sustaining life – three percent of the planet actually, albeit mostly underground. By comparison, just one percent of Earth’s volume, from the central core to the upper atmosphere, is inhabited by some kind of life. They compared pressure and temperature conditions on Earth to those of Mars to come up with the surprising results.

The paper is currently available for free here.

(via  universetoday)

alecshao:

Cueva de las Manos (Cave of Hands): 

“…A cave or series of caves located in the province of Santa Cruz, Argentina…famous for the paintings of hands by indigenous inhabitants some 9,000 years ago. The composition of the inks is mineral and therefore cannot be carbon dated, so the age of the paintings was calculated from the bone-made pipes used to spray the paint onto the wall blocked by the hand.” 


(via dendroica)

On the occasion of Caturday —>

On the occasion of Caturday —>

(Source: blua)

dendroica:

This NASA montage of New Horizons images shows Jupiter and its volcanic moon Io, taken during the spacecraft’s Jupiter flyby in early 2007. The image shows a major eruption in progress on Io’s night side, at the northern volcano Tvashtar. Incandescent lava glows red beneath a volcanic plume, whose uppermost portions are illuminated by sunlight. The plume appears blue due to scattering of light by small particles within it. Picture: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute/Goddard Space Flight Center/AFP (via Pictures of the day: 16 November 2011 - Telegraph)

dendroica:

This NASA montage of New Horizons images shows Jupiter and its volcanic moon Io, taken during the spacecraft’s Jupiter flyby in early 2007. The image shows a major eruption in progress on Io’s night side, at the northern volcano Tvashtar. Incandescent lava glows red beneath a volcanic plume, whose uppermost portions are illuminated by sunlight. The plume appears blue due to scattering of light by small particles within it. Picture: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute/Goddard Space Flight Center/AFP (via Pictures of the day: 16 November 2011 - Telegraph)

Brilliant! Spooning.

Brilliant! Spooning.

(Source: 9gag)

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