GODGIFT.'s avatar
GODGIFT.
h
npub1n32h...lyd2
I'm addicted to creative abilities
A meteor just entered the Earth over Stonehenge today aligning perfectly with Venus and Jupiter during sunset. ☄️ A very rare shot. image
The famous Moon Bridge 🌙 🌉 Is it a moon or a bridge? Either way, this reflection is mesmerizing! What a cool design. 🌉 image
No, this isn’t CGI or edited. These are Red Sprites 🌩️, a rare type of lightning that flashes high above thunderstorms. They can stretch up to 100 miles and last only milliseconds ⚡. Sprites appear in the upper atmosphere, glowing red or orange, and are almost invisible to the naked eye unless conditions are perfect 👀. A natural light show most people never see. image
The Wonder of the World: An Eagle That Flew for 20 Years but Never Crossed the Sea, Eventually Dying in Saudi Arabia For twenty years, scientists tracked the flights of a Steppe Eagle from Russia, after attaching a GPS device to monitor its global movements. The eagle eventually died in Saudi Arabia. The flight path stunned researchers worldwide. The bird traveled across vast deserts and towering mountains, moving between many countries. Yet, despite all its incredible journeys, it never once dared to fly over the sea. Instead, the Steppe Eagle chose to circle the earth by land, enduring long migrations across harsh deserts, barren landscapes, and rugged terrain. Over its entire 20-year lifespan, not a single time did it attempt to cross over the sea—even in places where the sea crossing would have been much shorter than the land detour. Scientists explained that this behavior is linked to the eagle’s reliance on thermal currents—warm air rising from the land—that help the bird soar and conserve energy during long flights. These thermal currents are generated only over land, and they are either absent or extremely rare above the open sea. That is why, throughout its lifetime and thousands of kilometers of migration, the eagle never once risked flying above the ocean.
🌍 A 745-mile crack runs through California — and one day, it could change everything. Known as the San Andreas Fault, this massive geological boundary stretches 1,100 km across California and plunges nearly 20 miles beneath the Earth’s surface. It marks the meeting point of two colossal tectonic plates: the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate. As they grind slowly past each other, pressure builds silently for decades — or even centuries — before releasing in the form of violent earthquakes. This tension makes the San Andreas one of the most feared and closely monitored faults in the world. Scientists warn of the inevitable arrival of “The Big One,” a potentially catastrophic earthquake that could reshape Southern California within our lifetimes. Yet, the fault has also become a curious attraction. Tourists flock to see the spot where Earth’s giant plates meet, sometimes even reporting faint, eerie rumbles echoing from deep below — subtle reminders that the ground beneath us is alive and restless. The San Andreas Fault is not just a crack in the Earth — it’s a reminder of our planet’s immense power, always shifting, always reshaping the land we live on. 📸 Image: US Govt / USFS Source: U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), U.S. Forest Service #SanAndreasFault #Earthquake #Geology #TheBigOne #California #TectonicPlates #EarthScience #Seismology #NaturalDisasters image