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9486 results for: ‘Pear-在线奖状生成器单页源码附接口✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.HCHMMUSgeiH’

  • 22nd August 2013 Sol 371

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on August 22, 2013 Mars has two moons Phobos – about 22km diameter, and Deimos which is about half that.  MastCam has recently imaged an occultation where Phobos passed in front of the more distant Deimos.

  • 20th September 2014 Sol 755

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on September 20, 2014 This striking image shows the flat surface of the local mudstone in the Pahrump area.  In it you can see raised ridges and veins, a bit like we saw back in Yellowknife Bay.

  • Life has always been about give and take

    Professor Mark Williams explains the importance of mutualistic cities in creating hope for a better, natural future.

  • Sol 1 First Image of Mt. Sharp

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on August 7, 2012 First Image of the 5.5 km high Mt. Sharp (HazCam), the ultimate target of Curiosity. Two of the Curiosity 50 cm diameter wheels are visible in the foreground.

  • 24th February 2017 – Sol 1620

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on February 24, 2017 We have been examining Ireson Hill and found this unusual 10-15 cm diameter rock- called Passagassawakakeag ! The shape is an almost perfect Dreikanter.

  • New project to save sole surviving population of rare wildflower

    A new conservation project at the Botanic Garden hopes to save a rare wildflower that is almost extinct throughout Leicestershire and Rutland - and has a declining population nationwide.

  • School children invited to take part in Leicester’s COP28 celebration

    Space Park Leicester and the National Centre for Earth Observation are inviting school children to send in their pictures, posters and infographics about climate change.

  • The Geography of the Criminal Corpse: Magic, therapies and bodily pieces across Europe. By Francesca

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on January 19, 2016   I have been involved in the first two years of the project as a postdoctoral researcher working on the medico-magical employment of the criminal corpse’s pieces: hands, fingers,...

  • 24th May 2013 Sol 284

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on May 24, 2013 One of the things we tend to forget about, because it is working quietly in the background, is the communications network.

  • Sunday 30th December Sol 143

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on December 30, 2012 Gale Crater is named after Walter Frederick Gale, an Australian astronomer in the early 20 th century (1865-1945).

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