The moon is really weird, astronomically. Oddly big for our lil planet Maybe the fact that it's here and we're also here is correlated My guess: Tidal effects from the moon keep the outer core molten, which in turn keeps Earth's magnetic field going, which in turn protects our atmosphere and life
On Twitter they're called "teets"
It takes ~3kJ to build a housefly— about the same energy needed to keep a single christmas bulb lit for an hour, based on metabolic rate and gestation time. (It's probably even less than this, since developing larvae don't... fly around)
1920s people coming up from tunnels at 3x atmospheric pressure with f'd up joints and brains: "what could this possibly be, there is no way to tell, lmao" astronauts coming back from working in 1/3 atm space suits with f'd up eyes and brains: "what could this possibly
Where do I trade in my Twitter posts with eight likes for a spot in the What's Hot timeline?
A telephone pole is a hydrostatic column. The weight of the infused pitch inside bears down and forces it out the bottom. The top drains first and is pale; the bottom often has a syrupy mess of hydrocarbon spilling onto the pavement. A 60ft pole would have ~2 atm of fluid pressure at the base