with grace in your heart & flowers in your hair

Megan Owen. In love with life :)
beingblog:

“Love is a choice — not simply, or necessarily, but rather a willingness to be present to others without pretense or guile.” —Carter Heyward, feminist theologian and Episcopal priest, from Our Passion For Justice
Photo by Dave 77459 (distributed with instagram)

beingblog:

“Love is a choice — not simply, or necessarily, but rather a willingness to be present to others without pretense or guile.”
Carter Heyward, feminist theologian and Episcopal priest, from Our Passion For Justice

Photo by Dave 77459 (distributed with instagram)

annaharo:

Dedicated keepers in Kenya protect baby elephant, Shukuru from the cold rain, and risk of pneumonia, with a custom-made raincoat.

annaharo:

Dedicated keepers in Kenya protect baby elephant, Shukuru from the cold rain, and risk of pneumonia, with a custom-made raincoat.

discoverynews:

Rare Earth Element Discovered In Ancient Stars
In three stars far, far away, one of the rarest elements known to man has been spotted, improving our understanding about how heavy elements are created, bolstering evidence that a rare type of supernova may have been responsible for their creation.
Tellurium — a brittle and toxic semiconducting metal — has for the first time been discovered in the atmospheres of three stars that are nearly 12 billion years old. The stars, all a few thousand light-years from Earth, live inside the Milky Way.
With the help of the Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers from MIT and other institutions were able to “see” tellurium by the light it absorbs.
keep reading

discoverynews:

Rare Earth Element Discovered In Ancient Stars

In three stars far, far away, one of the rarest elements known to man has been spotted, improving our understanding about how heavy elements are created, bolstering evidence that a rare type of supernova may have been responsible for their creation.

Tellurium — a brittle and toxic semiconducting metal — has for the first time been discovered in the atmospheres of three stars that are nearly 12 billion years old. The stars, all a few thousand light-years from Earth, live inside the Milky Way.

With the help of the Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers from MIT and other institutions were able to “see” tellurium by the light it absorbs.

keep reading

(via nispell)