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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

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New Evidence Suggests Humans May Have Been Dipping Crunchy Things Into Gooey Things Earlier Than Previously Thought
KOOBI FORA, KENYA—Saying their findings could offer fresh insight into the dietary habits of our prehistoric ancestors, archaeologists from Rice University announced Tuesday that they had unearthed new evidence suggesting humans may have been dipping crunchy things into gooey things far earlier than previously thought. “While the scientific community has generally believed that dipping crunchy things into gooey things began some 4,000 years ago with ancient Babylonians dunking crusty flatbreads in a variety of jellies and fish pastes, our research indicates that the practice actually began more than a million years earlier,” said lead researcher Nicolas Farr, adding that the newly discovered fossil remains of Homo erectus point to the species dipping local root vegetables into pools of coagulated blood from game animals such as gazelles and antelopes, and even heating it with newly harnessed fire to achieve a more melty consistency. “While it’s possible that still older hominids made crude attempts at a crunchy-gooey dietary convention—perhaps dipping strips of tree bark into animal dung—it’s unlikely that evidence would be preserved in the fossil record after all this time.” Farr went on to say that a series of ancient Roman legal tablets, however, remains the most recent evidence of a codified prohibition against double-dipping.
A forensic facial reconstruction from a crystal vodka skull.Â
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Aw, yeah, that’s the good shit.
I love abandoned ruins so much
the world taken back by nature is my aesthetic
Sleep well. (by C-Section Comics)
WHAT IS THIS
@megandear
This is the best thing ever
Completely understand

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mark hamill surprised adam scott on jimmy kimmel and its???? the cutest thing i’ve ever seen in my life???
OH MY GOSH
Black BonesÂ
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More than just a hammer
https://twitter.com/northumbriana/status/846454474654781442
I think the world needs more sea shantiesÂ

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Red and purple fog.
The original inspiration for Batman’s Joker, Conrad Veidt. Before Batman had the Joker, a 1928 film titled The Man Who Laughs had Veidt.