Меню
Главная
Форумы
Новые сообщения
Поиск сообщений
Что нового?
Новые сообщения
Новые сообщения профилей
Последняя активность
Пользователи
Текущие посетители
Новые сообщения профилей
Поиск сообщений профилей
Вход
Регистрация
Что нового?
Поиск
Поиск
Искать только в заголовках
От:
Новые сообщения
Поиск сообщений
Меню
Вход
Регистрация
Установить приложение
Установить
Главная
Форумы
Предприятия Твери
Образовательные учреждения
Вузы
Тверская государственная сельскохозяйственная а...
JavaScript отключён. Чтобы полноценно использовать наш сайт, включите JavaScript в своём браузере.
Вы используете устаревший браузер. Этот и другие сайты могут отображаться в нём некорректно.
Вам необходимо обновить браузер или попробовать использовать
другой
.
Ответить в теме
Сообщение
<blockquote data-quote="Morrissambit" data-source="post: 1020546" data-attributes="member: 85778"><p>Gvnt Subscribe to this AI-driven video-editing toolkit for an extra 20% off</p><p>Using data from NASA s Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory GRAIL , mission scientists have solved a lunar mystery almost as old as the moon itself.Early theories suggested the craggy outline of a region of the moon s surface known as Oceanus Procellarum, or the Ocean of Storms, was caused by an asteroid impact. If this theory had been correct, the basin it formed would be the largest asteroid impact basin on the moon. However, mission scientists studying GRAIL data believe they have found evidence the craggy outline of this rectangular region -- roughly 1,600 miles 2,600 kilometers across -- is actually the result of the formation of ancient rift valleys. The near side of the moon has been studied for centuries, and yet continues to offer up surp <a href="https://www.cup-stanley.ca">stanley coffee mug</a> ri <a href="https://www.cup-stanley.co.uk">stanley mug</a> ses for scientists with the right tools, said Maria Zuber, principal investigator of NASA s GRAIL mission, from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge. We interpret the gravity anomalies discovered by GRAIL as part of the lunar magma plumbing system -- the conduits that fed lava to the surface during ancient volcanic eruptions. The sur <a href="https://www.cup-stanley.uk">stanley cup</a> face of the moon s near side is dominated by a unique area called the Procellarum region, characterized by low elevations, unique composition and numerous ancient volcanic plains. The rifts are buried beneath dark volcanic plains on the near side of the moon and have been detected only in the gravity data provided by GRAIL. The lava-flooded rift valleys are unlike anything fo Khai Garuda KDE Dr460nized might be the coolest-looking Linux distro available</p><p>Japanese Americans at the Tule Lake segregation center in 1944.Carl Mydans鈥擳he LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesBy Lily Rothman and Liz RonkFebruary 17, 2017 9:10 AM ESTWhen President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed his i <a href="https://www.stanleycups.ro">stanley cup</a> nfamous Executive Order 9066 on Fe <a href="https://www.stanley-cup.it">stanley bottles</a> b. 19, 1942 mdash; a full 75 years ago this Sunday mdash; it created the legal framework for the eventual internment of Japanese immigrants and Japanese-Americans, a shameful episode in American history that would later draw an official apology from the U.S. government.The internment and relocation were not monolithic, as LIFE readers learned from a 1944 report by photographer Carl Mydans. The Japanese-Americans who were deemed to be disloyal or dangerous to the U.S. mdash; though sometimes for no reason beyond suspicion mdash; were set apart from the others, and many of them ended up at a California camp known as Tule Lake Segregation Center mdash; known as the worst of all civilian detention camps in the country, per LIFE.There were about 18,000 people there, including children, and 70% of the prisoners were native-born American citizens.Even in the instances where the reason why someone had been sent there were more concrete, there were often extenuating circumstances: for example, Mydans photographe <a href="https://www.cups-stanley.ca">stanley cup</a> d one man who had refused to take an oath of allegiance to the U.S. because he had been asked to do so right after his being picked up for relocation had resulted in the harvest at his farm rotting. When his</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Morrissambit, post: 1020546, member: 85778"] Gvnt Subscribe to this AI-driven video-editing toolkit for an extra 20% off Using data from NASA s Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory GRAIL , mission scientists have solved a lunar mystery almost as old as the moon itself.Early theories suggested the craggy outline of a region of the moon s surface known as Oceanus Procellarum, or the Ocean of Storms, was caused by an asteroid impact. If this theory had been correct, the basin it formed would be the largest asteroid impact basin on the moon. However, mission scientists studying GRAIL data believe they have found evidence the craggy outline of this rectangular region -- roughly 1,600 miles 2,600 kilometers across -- is actually the result of the formation of ancient rift valleys. The near side of the moon has been studied for centuries, and yet continues to offer up surp [url=https://www.cup-stanley.ca]stanley coffee mug[/url] ri [url=https://www.cup-stanley.co.uk]stanley mug[/url] ses for scientists with the right tools, said Maria Zuber, principal investigator of NASA s GRAIL mission, from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge. We interpret the gravity anomalies discovered by GRAIL as part of the lunar magma plumbing system -- the conduits that fed lava to the surface during ancient volcanic eruptions. The sur [url=https://www.cup-stanley.uk]stanley cup[/url] face of the moon s near side is dominated by a unique area called the Procellarum region, characterized by low elevations, unique composition and numerous ancient volcanic plains. The rifts are buried beneath dark volcanic plains on the near side of the moon and have been detected only in the gravity data provided by GRAIL. The lava-flooded rift valleys are unlike anything fo Khai Garuda KDE Dr460nized might be the coolest-looking Linux distro available Japanese Americans at the Tule Lake segregation center in 1944.Carl Mydans鈥擳he LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesBy Lily Rothman and Liz RonkFebruary 17, 2017 9:10 AM ESTWhen President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed his i [url=https://www.stanleycups.ro]stanley cup[/url] nfamous Executive Order 9066 on Fe [url=https://www.stanley-cup.it]stanley bottles[/url] b. 19, 1942 mdash; a full 75 years ago this Sunday mdash; it created the legal framework for the eventual internment of Japanese immigrants and Japanese-Americans, a shameful episode in American history that would later draw an official apology from the U.S. government.The internment and relocation were not monolithic, as LIFE readers learned from a 1944 report by photographer Carl Mydans. The Japanese-Americans who were deemed to be disloyal or dangerous to the U.S. mdash; though sometimes for no reason beyond suspicion mdash; were set apart from the others, and many of them ended up at a California camp known as Tule Lake Segregation Center mdash; known as the worst of all civilian detention camps in the country, per LIFE.There were about 18,000 people there, including children, and 70% of the prisoners were native-born American citizens.Even in the instances where the reason why someone had been sent there were more concrete, there were often extenuating circumstances: for example, Mydans photographe [url=https://www.cups-stanley.ca]stanley cup[/url] d one man who had refused to take an oath of allegiance to the U.S. because he had been asked to do so right after his being picked up for relocation had resulted in the harvest at his farm rotting. When his [/QUOTE]
Имя
Проверка
Ответить
Главная
Форумы
Предприятия Твери
Образовательные учреждения
Вузы
Тверская государственная сельскохозяйственная а...
Сверху