I live for stuff like this.
Pure creativeness and absolutely hilarious.
So Vulcan. I love it.
Even in Death, Carl Sagan never ceases to inspire.
Carl Sagan on human exploration of space:
Human beings are a curious, inquisitive, exploratory species.
I think that has been the secret of our success as a species.
We now have reached a point in human history, when all the Earth is explored; there are no new places to explore on the Earth.
At just this moment, these spacecraft permit us, in a halting, tentative, preliminary way, to leave the Earth and examine our surroundings in space.
An enterprise which I believe is in the truest human tradition of exploration and discovery.
We are at an epochal moment. Our machines, and eventually ourselves, are going out into space. I believe that the history of our species will never again be the same.
We have committed ourselves to space, and I do not think we are about to turn back.
Artefacts from the Earth are spinning out into the cosmos. I believe the time will come when most human cultures will be engaged in an activity we might describe as a dandelion going to seed.
From his 1977 CHRISTMAS LECTURES, animated for our 2015 advent calendar.
I feel so goddamn trapped by revision and I’ve been away from home for so long that every time someone asks me how I am I want to grab them and shout “I WANT TO SEE MOUNTAINS AGAIN, GANDALF. MOUNTAINS!”
The European Space Agency (ESA) has announced an ambitious plan to build a space base between Earth and the Moon, which astronauts could use as a kind of halfway house on lunar missions – or as a launchpad for new explorations elsewhere in the Solar System.
While details on the proposal aren’t yet available, the ESA says this ‘human outpost’ in space could be built within the decade – and the organisation will be actively considering the plan at a conference later in the year.
In addition to providing a “crossroads in space” to help with lunar research missions and other space-faring expeditions, this base – situated approximately halfway between Earth and the Moon – could also serve as a successor to the International Space Station (ISS).
The ISS is scheduled to come out of service in 2024, after some 26 years of active duty, and it’s not yet clear how space agencies around the world plan to fill the void left by this massively important space research facility.
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Oh my god. This kitten is named LeVar Purrton.
i think the coolest thing would be to see a new color
Climate Justice Organizer | Dark Academia Enthusiast | Writer
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