Categoría: General

Éste es el cajón desastre donde van las entradas que no tienen categoría o me ha dado pereza ponérsela

Banda sonora de «El Fin de tu Mundo» (Janmi Pace)

Banda sonora de «El Fin de tu Mundo» (Janmi Pace)

Esta es la banda sonora, basada en canciones de Spotify escogidas por el autor, de la novela de ciencia ficción «El Fin de tu Mundo». A continuación, la relación entre canciones y capítulos del libro. ¡Cuidado! El título de algún capítulo podría ser un spoiler para las mentes más despiertas. Quedas prevenido…

Channeling my inner toddler at the beach. It may look kind of funny, but this is step 1 of my effort to pile dirt on the tether that connects to my seismometer. https://bit.ly/3vlI3Qx

Channeling my inner toddler at the beach. It may look kind of funny, but this is step 1 of my effort to pile dirt on the tether that connects to my seismometer. https://bit.ly/3vlI3Qx

Channeling my inner toddler at the beach. It may look kind of funny, but this is step 1 of my effort to pile dirt on the tether that connects to my seismometer. pic.twitter.com/8lXnrcWVSZ — NASA InSight (@NASAInSight) March 14, 2021 from http://twitter.com/NASAInSight via IFTTT

A world 41 light-years away is thought to have a poisonous atmosphere generated from magma seeping through surface cracks🌋 Its hazy appearance might compare to Titan, Saturn’s largest moon. And Earth may have had a thicker haze early in its history. https://bit.ly/38xahxS https://bit.ly/38P5BUj

A world 41 light-years away is thought to have a poisonous atmosphere generated from magma seeping through surface cracks🌋 Its hazy appearance might compare to Titan, Saturn’s largest moon. And Earth may have had a thicker haze early in its history. https://bit.ly/38xahxS https://bit.ly/38P5BUj

A world 41 light-years away is thought to have a poisonous atmosphere generated from magma seeping through surface cracks🌋 Its hazy appearance might compare to Titan, Saturn’s largest moon. And Earth may have had a thicker haze early in its history. https://t.co/ir4VNhNH1R pic.twitter.com/WspSkZjldj — NASA Exoplanets (@NASAExoplanets) March 11, 2021 from http://twitter.com/NASAExoplanets via IFTTT