This blog has become a sort of personal-cum-public diary. As for its contents, some are meant for me and my friends and relatives; others are for the public. This blog will have only positive, ennobling, elevating, encouraging and uplifting thoughts/ideas/materials. Whoever visits should feel happy and should be able to pick up some good ideas/thoughts/links. In short, "NOTHING NEGATIVE" is my motto.(Grateful thanks to Jon Sullivan and Public-Domain-Photos.com for the background photo)
Happy New Year 2021
WISH YOU ALL A HAPPY, HEALTHY,
PROSPEROUS AND PURPOSEFUL
NEW YEAR 2020
🏡Grindelwald
, Most Beautiful Village in Switzerland , Swiss Valley | grindelwald first
Grindelwald Village in Switzerland🇨🇭
Grindelwald, a village in Switzerland’s Bernese Alps, is a popular gateway for
the Jungfrau Region, with skiing in winter and hiking in summer. It's also a
base for mountain-climbing ascents up the iconic north face of Eiger Mountain.
Gletscherschlucht, a glacial gorge just outside Grindelwald Elevation: 1,034 m
Weather: 2°C, Wind S at 11 km/h, 96% Humidity Music 🎶
A Minor Waltz - Esther Abrami #Grindelwald#SwissVillage#SwissView
Grateful thanks to Swiss
View
and YouTube and all the others who made this video possible
All the stars we see, including
our Sun, are in a balance of powers. Stars are very heavy objects, so they have
strong gravity, which presses them from the outside and makes them shrink. But
inside a star, while it burns fuel, there are nuclear reactions that produce
incredible amounts of energy. This energy is the light and heat that we feel
during the day. But most importantly, these reactions increase the pressure
inside the star and create a force that is fighting with gravity. A star the
size of our Sun can shine for about 10 billion years. Specifically, our lovely
Sun is about 4.5 billion years old and has already burned half its fuel. The
next stage in a star's life comes when it runs out of juice. Internal pressure
drops, but gravity continues to press. In less than half a second, a huge star
turns into a small and dense object. This rapid collapse creates incredible
shock waves that cause the upper layers of the star to explode. Boom! But what
happens next? Well, the heavier the star, the more interesting the events will
be.
Uttarakhand glacier disaster
explained What caused the Uttarakhand disaster? Avalanche or glacial lake burst
in Chamoli? The big thaw: why glaciers are melting Melting ice & global
consequences The catastrophe of vanishing glaciers #UttrakhandGlacierBurst #UttarakhandDisaster #WIONWideangle About Channel: WION -The World is
One News, examines global issues with in-depth analysis. We provide much more
than the news of the day. Our aim to empower people to explore their world.
With our Global headquarters in New Delhi, we bring you news on the hour, by
the hour. We deliver information that is not biased. We are journalists who are
neutral to the core and non-partisan when it comes to the politics of the
world. People are tired of biased reportage and we stand for a globalised
united world. So for us the World is truly One. Please keep discussions on this
channel clean and respectful and refrain from using racist or sexist slurs as
well as personal insults. Subscribe to our channel at https://goo.gl/JfY3NI
I have a NEW channel ►
"Meet, Arnold!" - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NsoJa... If you like this video - put
Thumb Up button (please) and Subscribe to Ridddle channel. We will make this
universe smarter together! Okay, okay. I got to go..... See You
Soooooooooooooooon dudes ;)
Grateful thanks to Ridddle and YouTube and all the others who
made this video possible
Plastics are everywhere, and we
can’t seem to get rid of them. Could a worm be the solution we need? Does
Recycling Actually Help? ►►►►http://dne.ws/16zXnMX
“Most plastic is manufactured
from petroleum the end product of a few million years of natural decay of
once-living organisms. Petroleum's main components come from lipids that were
first assembled long ago in those organisms' cells.” Plastic-eating worms may
offer solution to mounting waste, researchers discover http://phys.org/news/2015-09-plastic-...
“Consider the plastic foam cup.
Every year, Americans throw away 2.5 billion of them. And yet, that waste is
just a fraction of the 33 million tons of plastic Americans discard every year.
Less than 10 percent of that total gets recycled, and the remainder presents
challenges ranging from water contamination to animal poisoning.”
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