Posted on 03/03/2023 12:33:51 PM PST by Red Badger
Then what happened?
What happens when a 7 mile diameter asteroid hits a shallow sea?
It creates a 120 wide white-hot crater on the sea floor. Sea water pours in from all sides and instantly flashes to steam.
Confined like a rocket nozzle by the crater sides and the wall of incoming seawater, it has only one way to go, straight up to space, sweeping the surrounding air with it.
How long does it take for the waters of the Gulf of Mexico to quench the exposed magma?
Apparently long enough to blow ¾ of the atmosphere out into space...
We had one resting on a window screen. Impressive critter.
42 responses and no Far Side references yet? This place is slipping!
https://twitter.com/americanbeetles/status/1387484380487200777
Nice woodland camo
Sphingidae Is an interesting group. Tomato Hornworms are part of it.
giant lacewing is the first of its kind recorded in eastern North America in over 50 years -- and the first record of the species ever in the state,"
That lacewing was probably passed by 100 shoppers that day, with nobody paying attention. They're probably more common than what these experts claim, it's just that this one was seen and caught by someone who was interested in bugs.
I probably would have picked it up and taken it home, just figuring it was just a dragonfly.
As a side note, on one of my vacations to Honduras, I took a photo of a big moth I had see on a tree. Over the course of about two years and several emails to the head of a butterfly museum in La Ceiba, Honduras, asking for identification of the moth, the curator finally responded.
I then contacted a butterfly guy in Arizona who collects them and mounts them for schools and universities and asked him if he had one of these moths that he could mount and frame for me. I have it hanging the wall.
I'll agree with that. I've only seen a couple in my lifetime here in Michigan
Here's something I just read:
there are approximately 8 species of moth to every single species of butterfly on the planet.
LOL, creative, good one.
It better not go to a Kmart as endangered Spotted Owls nest in the signs. <- true story. They need old growth trees to survive we were told when actually they need old Kmart signs.
There are lots of moths that are arguably as - or more - beautiful than butterflies. The ART of some of these designs is amazing, and it’s very difficult to believe that it’s all just ‘accidental’, and not the result of an original intelligent design or plan. (Next to the Luna, I’m especially fond of the Oleander Hawk-Moth):
https://www.treehugger.com/moth-species-more-beautiful-than-butterflies-4864257
A friend's wife has a section in her back yard garden with milkweed plants. Every year monarchs come in and lay their eggs on the leaves and she brings them into the house and raises them in an insect cage I built for her. I think last year she raised over 50 caterpillars to maturity and released them.
I don't know how they find her plants each year because it's a small backyard surrounded tucked into a wooded area. If I didn't know better, I would say the ones that arrive there are ones that were released the prior fall.
Anyway, it's pretty cool and she usually gives me several and some for my neighbor for our insect cages.
WTF IZZAT???......................
Death's Head Moth?.....................
Hah...that’s a giant lacewing! See the lace on her wings?
Actually, one of the many Wal-Mart “beauties” whose pictures make it online. There are a ton of them. But, she fit the correct kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and species.
I’m sorry I did that to you.
Lol!
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