Today’s lost archive image- Mudokons pulling faces
Some facial expressions for Abe and the other Mudokons.
(x)
(via ask-the-homestead-staff)
Source: magog-on-the-march
Today’s lost archive image- Mudokons pulling faces
Some facial expressions for Abe and the other Mudokons.
(x)
(via ask-the-homestead-staff)
Source: magog-on-the-march
Source: all-the-horses
Finished erotica piece of Garm (front) and Rourke (back). Figured these two would make for a good AU pairing. Didn’t want to go overboard with the lewd stuff, but I included a FLOOGIE anyway ‘cos I decided I needed the anatomical practice. Also I am a filthy furry.
Rocktopus!
Source: mobpsycho100
Cropped WIP of Garm and Rourke being cute. Full version is NSFW and contains a floogie, so I won’t post that because dicks are scary and are well known to ruin a person’s moral compass. :‘c
Black-and-white Ruffed Lemur
Source: twitter.com
When I was a child, my father would take me trout fishing, and I spent hours marveling from the riverbank at the trouts’ ability to, seemingly effortlessly, hold their position in the fast-moving water. As it turns out, those trout really were swimming effortlessly, in a manner demonstrated above. The fish you see here swimming behind the obstacle is dead. There’s nothing powering it, except the energy its flexible body can extract from the flow around it.
The obstacle sheds a wake of alternating vortices into the flow, and when the fish is properly positioned in that wake, the vortices themselves flex the fish’s body such that its head and its tail point in different directions. Under just the right conditions, there’s actually a resonance between the vortices and the fish’s body that generates enough thrust to overcome the fish’s drag. This means the fish can actually swim upstream without expending any energy of its own! The researchers came across this entirely by accident, and one of the questions that remains is how the trout is able to sense its surroundings well enough to intentionally take advantage of the effect. (Image and research credit: D. Beal et al.; via PhysicsBuzz; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)
Oh my god what the fuck
(via monere-lluvia)
Source: fuckyeahfluiddynamics
Back in January, our research biologists came across this octopus when pulling up a stone crab trap in Cedar Key. Octopus can get in...

Commission for https://www.deviantart.com/sweet-n-treat
Forgot to mention it on Deviantart - I’ve opened Fur Affinity account!


by Andrey

Back in January, our research biologists came across this octopus when pulling up a stone crab trap in Cedar Key. Octopus can get in...

Commission for https://www.deviantart.com/sweet-n-treat
Forgot to mention it on Deviantart - I’ve opened Fur Affinity account!


by Andrey
