Yeah. Though now that you mention it, I never found out the name of his other leg.
Their first customer is American Airlines. The airline is paying Graphyte to capture 10,000 tons of CO2 to offset emissions from its planes.
I know what my Cub Scouts are doing at their next meeting.
You didn’t have to post this.
The ghosts in Super Mario Brothers 3 (1988) would pursue Mario only when he looked away. When he faced them they would stop and hide their faces.
Good ol’ Shitpost Calligrapher!
https://theshitpostcalligrapher.tumblr.com/
Mantises live solitary lives, and are cannibalistic. I assume it’s more out of indifference than hate, but it’s close to what you’re looking for.
I especially liked the Neanderthals. Outsiders looking in.
Rain, rain, come today.
I love you rain, don’t go away.
Play in the gray in April and May.
People say, “Hey, do you miss the sun’s rays?”
No.
– Caspar Babypants
This is amazingly accurate for Oregon.
It includes … copies of historical documents including the U.S. Constitution, Declaration of Independence and Pledge of Allegiance.
https://www.npr.org/2024/03/27/1241186975/donald-trump-bible-god-bless-usa
They can and do get sick. Here’s an example of bovine parasites whose life cycle goes from cow to grass and back again:
https://livestock.extension.wisc.edu/articles/managing-worms-on-summer-pastures/
Mass is conserved. If you split water into hydrogen and oxygen, then combine them back into water, you will have the same amount of water as when you started.
That’s assuming you don’t have leaky equipment in your lab, of course.
Water is the exhaust product. Once you have water, the potential energy in the original chemical mix has already been released.
H2 + O --> H2O + energy (in the form of heat or electric potential)
To break down water you have to reverse the reaction and put that energy back in. That’s how electrolysis works:
H2O + energy (in the form of electric potential) --> H2 + O
And since no thermodynamic process is 100% efficient, you will lose some of the energy each time you go back and forth between these reactions.
Why, everybody knows Paul’s the reason North Dakota doesn’t have any trees. He logged 'em all out!
Somewhere in the northwest US. I don’t want to be more specific, lest I give away my location too easily.