August 24, 2010

"Occasionally, a group of spiders may build webs together in the same area. One such web, reported in 2007 at Lake Tawakoni State Park in Texas, measured 200 yards (180 m) across. Entomologists believe it may be the result of social cobweb spiders or of spiders building webs to spread out from one another."
Quote — 11:00am
1004381922

Century Theme by David
rohdia neo-constructivist mikasavela prismink dailymeh mjfchance uekou77 landscapearchitecture onyxearth dbreunig meetingboy existenceisfertile nantes kiyo foliate cmeinke freshphotons landscapeispersonal osakasteve jennilee ensignau visual-junkie lustik treeporn sperrault atelierpunkt 1187hunterwasser gmunk rensakun visualvalor poolssloop vsnature stopthesnow archiveofaffinities bouwkunst npr secondverse wnycradiolab babesofnpr newyorker arquitecturb noahcates tokyo-ras initialslf bashford yampo 1982 turnerhelen sandywang randosukeipu lunarius blackv lu--lu catalogliving proutymakesthings nordictation electricorchid marco yoppa outofcontextscience ikedashinji azizisbored alwaysunderconstruction atelier-e sharonleung organizedscenery magentalabs toomany cloudapproves ykmrpp dynamicdata amnhnyc anthrolology documentary catrinastewart grasscoveredroof microculture sttngfashion nickvdk 01mathery transforms madebyrobot publicradionerd yysgw openscience kagami karawheeler saintadrienne reigen kztkk l-ll-lll katherinepruitt plantsaretakingover denns blindsider erlnd fuckyeahdioramas curiousmoth spaceships turquoisebird savageriver shapesifter jivjivefive greatamericanpixel baumich immersiveengagement kneat fuckyeahcrystals ashiato holding--still microanthropomorphisms atumemono immaculatetelegraphy gopika internnet ld2423 fuckyeahghosttowns velosynth onnyc yuriyamamoto sadstartrek norasolisa romanmars thevintageweb craftsmanresearch
 
blog comments powered by Disqus