A PHOTO

yesterdaysprint:

The Tatler, England, November 22, 1935

Reblogged from Yesterday's Print
A PHOTO

yesterdaysprint:

Life Magazine, December 30, 1915

Reblogged from Yesterday's Print
A PHOTO

mizworldofrandom:

The Black Cat (1934)

Reblogged from AstroDevil
A PHOTO

ridiculousbirdfaces:

Beak fighting by Kevin Jensen

Dalmatian Pelicans (Pelecanus crispus)

Reblogged from just another dead rat
A VIDEO

adrunkensailor:

end0skeletal:

Collected from the Egyptian desert in March of 1846, the Helix desertorum specimen was sent to the British Museum, where scientists thought it had expired in transit. It was glued to a cardboard display card shortly after.

One day four years later, curators noticed something strange about their catatonic mollusk: the shell seemed to have moved from its glued position and a trail of discoloration followed it.

Archivists removed it from the card to give it a bath, with a suspicion the snail might have in fact been slumbering.

After just a few minutes of exposure to moisture, the snail’s head poked from its shell and surveyed its new home with four eye stalks.

As the snail adjusted to active life again, it became a minor celebrity and sat for a portrait by the museum’s zoological artist for inclusion in a book on mollusks, seen below:

image

(Source)

He was havin himself a nap.

Reblogged from Rhamphotheca
A PHOTO
Reblogged from AstroDevil
A PHOTO
Reblogged from SKULLGRIND
A PHOTO
Reblogged from AstroDevil