Foggy morning in eastern Montana
Taken August 2024
@highways-are-liminal-spaces / highways-are-liminal-spaces.tumblr.com
Foggy morning in eastern Montana
Taken August 2024
Moonset // Sunrise over Eastern Montana
Taken August 2024
Dusk on the Gunflint Trail
Superior National Forest, taken February 2024
Sunrise over the trees around Sax-Zim Bog, Minnesota
Taken February 2024
Late afternoon --> evening in eastern Minnesota
Taken February 2024
Fall colors in North Dakota
Taken October 2022
Autumn in North Dakota
Taken October 2022
Early morning in Edmonson County, Kentucky
Taken July 2022
Platte River Valley in central Nebraska
Taken April 2022
Sunset in North Platte, Nebraska
Taken April 2022
A foggy day in northern Ohio
Taken June 2019
Lonely places at dusk
Indiana/Ohio, February 2022
The sunset paints the bog red and gold
Sax-Zim, Minnesota, January 2021
just learned that magnolias are so old that they’re pollinated by beetles because they existed before bees
They existed *before beetles*
Why is this sad? Why am I sad?
This is how I feel about Joshua Trees. They and avocado trees produce fruit meant to be eaten and dispersed by giant ground sloths. Without them, the Joshua Trees' range has shrunk by 90%.
(my own photos)
Not only they, but the entire Mojave ecosystem is still struggling to adapt since the loss of ground sloth dung. their chief fertilizer.
Many, many trees and plants in the Americas have widely-spaced, extremely long thorns that do nothing to discourage deer eating their leaves, but would've penetrated the fur of ground sloths and mammoths. Likewise, if you've observed a tree that drops baseball or softball-sized fruit which lies on the ground and rots, like Osage Oranges, which were great for playing catch at my school, chances are they were ground sloth or mammoth chow.
You can read about various orphaned plants and trees missing their megafauna in this poignant post: