it’s all your fault line
it’s all your fault line
rollingdownahafemptystomachandthenrealisingyoulandedinarhubarbcrumleonsomeoneelsesmotherslapandbeingjustabithappythatyouhavefriends
this might be what my brain looks like
(Source: foxxypants, via vagapunk)
This 20 minute video is going to be disturbing and weird, and may make you feel uncomfortable.
In the 1930s, a Russian scientist named Sergey Bryukhonenko conducted a series of experiments on dogs to test the concept of reviving an animal after it’s been confirmed dead. The (in)famous youtube video of a dog’s severed head living without a body is from this film.
The experiment goes as such:
Remove the dog’s blood, which ceases the heart, killing the dog; Wait for a period of time before starting the revival process; Pump blood back into the dog, which reinstates the heart and body functions.
I would like to know what my followers think about this video. Is it moral to conduct an experiment which involves killing a dog and reviving it, even if it’s in the name of science? Leave your opinions in my ask box, or reblog this.
An embryo of a Spotten Dolphin in the fifth week of development. The hind limbs are present as small bumps (hind limb buds) near the base of the tail. The pin is approximately 1 inch long. Images to accompany the article by Dr. J.G.M. Thewissen and co-authors on hind limb development in dolphins.
Copyright 2006, Dr. J.G.M. Thewissen
(via fybiology)
happy australia day carnts