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Down to the River to Pray | Alison Krauss
One of my favorite hymns
That feeling of scooping a puppy out of the darkness and returning him safely.
His fur still bristling with chlorine
His tiny heart beating with the euphoric adventure
His warm eyes spilling over into my heart
His cool nose tingling against my cheek
His felt snout embracing my neck.
Gheegle.
I don’t know why I love that feeling so much.

This is how I feel about starting my summer semester at York Tech Tomorrow.
It’s not even a full semester, but still. DUN WANNA.

This skull was discovered in France between 1920 and 1940. Its easily one of the more disputed and controversial artifacts of its time. The museum of supernatural history claims (through analysis) that the horns are in fact, naturally a part of the skull.
I was genuinely curious on whether the info given was correct. Several websites say exactly the same thing..
”Several human skulls with horns protruding from them were discovered in a burial mound at Sayre, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, in the 1880’s. With the exception of the bony projections located about two inches above the eyebrows, the men whom these skeletons belonged to were anatomically normal, though at seven feet tall they were giants. It was estimated that the bodies had been buried around A.D. 1200. The find was made by a reputable group of antiquarians, including the Pennsylvania state historian and dignitary of the Presbyterian Church (Dr. G.P. Donehoo) and two professors, A.B. Skinner, of the American Investigating Museum, and W.K.Morehead, of Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts. The bones were sent to the American Investigating Museum in Philadelphia, where like so many finds that question anthropology, they were stolen and never seen again.
Pursuit, 6:69-70, July 1973 Mysteries of the Unexplained, p. 39 1992”
Take that as you will…How interesting!
(Source: subtle-pretext-chiming-in)