
Baby owls born outside an office wonder hoo’s working inside





Using only black ink, Malaysian illustrator Kamwei Fong has created a menagerie of playful black cats. Despite their contextual isolation and uniform style, each of Fong’s cats display unique personalities: some are fluffed and puffed into self-contained balls; others look with curiosity or wariness at fish that dangle or waves that crash from the animals’ own tails. The artist builds each feline form using innumerable short thin lines, varying the density of the marks to create volume as well as a palpable sense of furriness.






Reblogged from This is Colossal.


In a story from The Daily Mail . . .
Researchers are planning to modify elephant cells with frozen mammoth DNA and save the Arctic.
Lyuba, the world’s most well-preserved mammoth, went on display at the Natural History museum in 2014
A team of scientists from Harvard are planning clone the mammoths that went extinct more than 10,000 years ago, by modifying elephant cells with frozen mammoth DNA.
In this amazing plan to resurrect long-extinct beasts, scientists are using DNA from a 42,000-year old carcass.
The cloned mammoths would live in a 20,000 hectare Ice Age Safari Park.
I want one.
It’s Tuesday . . .
