🕷️Kenva🕷️
The barreleye fish, Macropinna microstoma, has extremely light-sensitive eyes that can rotate within a transparent, fluid-filled shield on its head. The fish’s tubular eyes are capped by bright green lenses. Here, the eyes are pointed upward in search of food. The two spots above the barreleye’s mouth—where we might expect to see eyes on a fish—are actually olfactory organs called nares, which are similar to human nostrils. Learn more about this extraordinary animal of the deep.
by Natan Vance
🥶 ~ Freeze Blue ~ 🥶 (blacklabelbarllc)
(Credit if you use please) (ko-fi)
all i want is for my conciousness to be transferred to a computer when i die.
Tomopterids are marine planktonic polychaetes—commonly known as Gossamer Worms — that swim in the water column, never touching the seafloor. Growing anywhere between 1 cm and 30 cm long. They are also one of the very few marine creatures that can produce yellow light, spewing their bioluminescence to scare off predators
Love to sea it 🌊
Grumpy Cusk Eel
NOAA Ocean Explorer on flickr
“Impossible Figures” Minimalist Posters by Éric Le Tutour
An Impossible Figure is an optical illusion in which a physically impossible three-dimensional object is depicted in two-dimensions. Humans have a natural tendency to try to interpret drawings as three-dimensional objects, which is why when viewing an impossible figure, you may feel confused or find the image unsettling!
Reutersvärd’s Triangle and the Penrose Triangle were first created by graphic artist Oscar Reutersvärd, the Impossible Cube (the kind of Necker Cube portrayed on the poster) was invented by M.C. Escher for his artwork Belvedere, and the Penrose Stairs were created by psychologist Lionel Penrose and his mathematician son, Roger Penrose. (The Penrose pair also created the Penrose Triangle independently from and later than Reutersvärd.) These inventors clearly show that “impossible objects are of interest to psychologists, mathematicians and artists without falling entirely into any one discipline”. Source.
More pictures of these awesome minimalist posters can be found here. Find more work by Eric Le Tutour at his site www.ericletutour.fr/!
Water is the only element that whole ecosystem was born of it