Nature
A few scarabs stroll along the underside of the water's surface
Some small insects can walk along the top of water. This is all thanks to water's unique abilities. Water molecules can attract one another. (A molecule is a group of atoms bonded together.) When these molecules bond together near the water's surface, they make a film on the top of the water. This is what scientists call surface tension. It allows some tiny bugs such as water striders to easily glide on top of the water.
By Mashud M Alfoyez 5 years ago in Earth
The mask and the gloves save lives ... and furthermore contaminate
A pandemic is a sickness that contaminates many individuals rapidly and in many spots. Coronavirus is another influenza-like sickness that previously showed up in December 2019 and has since spread all throughout the planet.
By Mashud M Alfoyez 5 years ago in Earth
An Ode to Autumn!
The first thing I do when I see trees in late August or early September is to scan the whole tree and see if the leaves have started to yellow. I don’t know where it came from but for as long as I can remember, I have always been fascinated by how steadily autumn consumes the lush green leaves until it turns yellow and golden and falls to the ground.
By Worngachan Shatsang5 years ago in Earth
Mechanical advances in archiving tremors
Structural plates are enormous pieces of rock. They make up the Earth's covering or hard external layer. They additionally make up the highest mantle. This is the layer directly beneath the covering. Structural plates move gradually after some time.
By Mashud M Alfoyez 5 years ago in Earth
Garden
The word for ‘paradise’ comes from the Persian word for a garden and has always meant the same thing in every culture. It is representative of ‘paradise on earth’ and is our opportunity to own a little bit of heaven – here and now. It has a restorative significance as a healer when we understand that gardens provide us with a place of sanctuary and well-being.
By optimuSPrime5 years ago in Earth
Soft
Look at me and what do you see. People say I have outside that nothing gets to me. It’s like when they look at me all they want, is for me to give them a leafy green to hold onto; However I’m holding you up so you can get to the top. So I say here on the leaf, get on I have what you need.
By William Lavergne 5 years ago in Earth
Pollution and Human Relationship
In a unique study that included tests on the toxicity of particulates, toxic substances, and greenhouse gases that put people at risk of toxic waste, lead researcher Drew Richard Marcantonio of the University of Notre Dame, who will be a doctorate in humanities, Sean. Princeton and Agustin Fuentes of the University of Notre Dame have found a strong and important relationship between the distribution of global climate and the dangers of toxic pollution. In other words, countries most at risk of the effects of climate change are those countries with the highest risk of toxic air pollution, i.e. In the first study of its kind which included testing both the risk of toxic particles and non-toxic emissions, greenhouse gas researchers Fielder, Debra Javeline (Princeton) and Agustin Fuentes (Notre Dame) have found a strong and important relationship between global warming and the dangers of toxic pollution.
By Bikram Gaihre5 years ago in Earth
The Border Between
From spring, to summer, through fall. We live in our world, and you live in yours, but our two worlds are not separate, not by far. It may seem as so, from the veiled line which separates us, but only those who venture closer, know the truth; that during this time of year, it is not yet a barrier, but a border that you are free to cross whenever.
By Anabeth Conatts5 years ago in Earth





