Our Lovely Planet Earth

A blog about Earth. How we can protect it for future generations. What the wild places look like. What to love about it. How beautiful it is. Why we need to preserve it. What people are doing on it, good and bad. What you can do. Cherish, love, and care for it, or it will melt away at our touch. Prove that our Earth is here to stay.
Recent Tweets @

brandef:

assangistan:

MUST READ & PROTEST THIS: See what we’ve been trying to tell you!

via resistkxl:

Toxic waste spill in northern Alberta biggest of recent disasters in North America


“Every plant and tree died” in the area touched by the spill, said James Ahnassay, chief of the Dene Tha First Nation, whose members run traplines in an area that has seen oil and gas development since the 1950s.

(via forfieldandforest)

(via burairium)

lostbeasts:

i will forever be dumbfounded by the SHEER SIZES of some prehistoric animals i mean

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holy

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friggin

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shit

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i still think HORSES are big but

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would you

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just

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cOULD YOU IMAGINE

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FUCK

(via 2torykiind)

c4ss:

NEW LAWS WOULD MAKE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTEST “TERRORISM”

Most people have heard of tree-sitting—a tactic environmentalists use to prevent old-growth trees from being cut down and whole forests decimated. In its heyday, in the late 1990s and early 2000s, members of groups like Earth First! climbed 100-foot-tall Redwoods and stayed there to save them. Beginning in 1997, one woman in Humboldt, California, named her tree Luna and stayed in it for two years, until enough money could be raised to prevent it from being axed. In 1998, in a Northern California old-growth forest, another treesitter named David Gypsy Chain was “accidentally” killed when loggers felled a tree that came crashing into the protester. He died instantly of massive head trauma.

This style of protest was also hugely successful—that is, until a series of arrests in 2005 against radical environmentalists who were labeled “terrorists.” It scared the shit out of the environmental-activist community, and folks started drifting away. …

(via forfieldandforest)

liberalsarecool:

Give them a taste.

(via stfuconservatives)

518environmentalism:

climate-changing:

shoreditchelite:

The History of Climate Change Negotiations in 83 Seconds.

Just awesome.

Yeah pretty much…

neil-gaiman:

actegratuit:

Protesters #OccupyGezi to save Istanbul park

Activists defy bulldozers to block demolition of city’s ‘last public green space’.

Unconfirmed reports suggest more than 10,000 people are currently gathered in Taksim’s Gezi Park. 

pics from http://occupygezipics.tumblr.com/

please share and support these brave people!

Wishing them luck and safety and that they win…

(via amestibovver-ed)

rhamphotheca:

Bears and Humans…

rhamphotheca:

Bears and Humans…

(via the-blind-banditt)

karenhurley:

This flower shaped confetti contains flower seeds that grow into wildflowers. It is hand made and biodegradable so it leaves no waste. Via

(via thrifttreasures)

oceanographic:

Whale Shark in Chiraumi Aquarium, Okinawa. (by uituit626)

pervocracy:

thatscienceguy:

I’m sure everyone has heard about the great Lake Baikal, and if you haven’t,boy, are you missing out.

This ancient lake, which is about 25 million years old, and thought to be the oldest in the world, contains 20% of the world’s unfrozen fresh water. That’s right, it contains just 1% less fresh water than all the Great Lakes combined,while it’s surface area is over 7 times smaller.

Why is that, you ask? It’s because Lake Baikal is the deepest lake in the world: It’s maximum depth is 1642 meters, which is deep enough for the Eiffel Tower to stand on itself 5 times and not reach the surface.

But it gets better: the Lake Baikal is among the clearest lakes of the world, so you can see the bottom to a depth of nearly 40 meters, and you can drink right from it, no purifying needed. Furthermore, Lake Baikal sustains 2630 different species of animals and plants, 80% of which are unique to it, and can’t be found anywhere else.

Oh, and by the way? Under both the lake and it’s underwater sediment some of Earth’s tallest mountains(plural!) are submerged, their height over 7000 meters.

Lake Baikal is perhaps one of the world’s most amazing, awe-inspiring, and unique locations, and I would seriously recommend everybody who has some free time on their hands to discover more on their own.

P.S. Have I mentioned that when it freezes (fully, whoa!) it’s ice looks like this? And you can listen to some beautiful sounds you can make with it here!

Lake Baikal has seals, even though it’s more than a thousand miles from any ocean.  No one’s really sure how they got there.

(via laughingisbetter)

headlikeanorange:

A tawny-bellied hermit (Untamed Americas - NGC)

(via burairium)

nikolawashere:

NY under water.
The eye-catching swimming pool in Mumbai, India, has been built to raise awareness about the threat of sea level rises as a result of global warming.  
It was constructed by attaching a giant aerial photograph of the New York City skyline to the floor of the pool.

nikolawashere:

NY under water.

The eye-catching swimming pool in Mumbai, India, has been built to raise awareness about the threat of sea level rises as a result of global warming.  

It was constructed by attaching a giant aerial photograph of the New York City skyline to the floor of the pool.

(via burairium)