Siyucircle - Siyucircle's Corner Of Nonsense

-
thegodmother97 reblogged this · 4 years ago
-
thegodmother97 liked this · 4 years ago
-
tyhjvg liked this · 5 years ago
-
seeselfblack liked this · 5 years ago
-
gym60 reblogged this · 6 years ago
-
gym60 liked this · 6 years ago
-
ohokayhannah reblogged this · 6 years ago
-
a--beautiful---disaster liked this · 8 years ago
-
jamaicanlioness liked this · 8 years ago
-
lazysleepybum reblogged this · 8 years ago
-
thetweenplaces reblogged this · 8 years ago
-
itisirachelle-blog liked this · 8 years ago
-
sound-overlord liked this · 8 years ago
-
merkinsofdespair liked this · 8 years ago
-
chickenbrothels reblogged this · 8 years ago
-
marykategreene liked this · 8 years ago
-
lachicakmart liked this · 8 years ago
-
godsofemolympus-blog liked this · 8 years ago
-
severelystupendousface reblogged this · 8 years ago
-
hoeregulations liked this · 8 years ago
-
fywomeninhistory reblogged this · 9 years ago
-
summerskeletons liked this · 9 years ago
-
our-own-inspiration reblogged this · 9 years ago
-
jsigaines reblogged this · 9 years ago
-
maryschild liked this · 9 years ago
More Posts from Siyucircle







a short comic i did for my english sci-fi final, about a girl and her android
talk about things taking forever @__@
6.11.14
Bots Master Intro I used to race home to watch this. And when acting it out, I always wanted to be Ninjzz


Meet Dreadnoughtus — the largest dinosaur ever found
On Thursday, Nature published the results of a years-long excavation in Argentina, which may have unveiled the largest and heaviest dinosaur to ever walk on earth. Named Dreadnoughtus schrani – after the early 20th-century battleship — the dinosaur is estimated to have lived 77 million years ago.
According to calculations, Dreadnoughtus weighed around 65 tons and measured 85 feet long. If you want to get a sense of how ridiculously huge that is, that’s heavier than an adult sperm whale or an entire herd of African elephants — and seven times the weight of a Tyrannosaurus rex, which is frankly unimpressive in comparison.
Why is it called Dreadnoughtus? | Follow micdotcom










1,200 aboriginal Canadian women have gone missing over the past 30 years. Hashtag asks #AmINext?
On Aug. 17, Winnipeg police pulled the body of 15-year-old Tina Fontaine out of the Red River near Alexander Docks.
The scope of the tragedy prompted Holly Jarret of Hamilton, Ont. — cousin to Loretta Saunders, an indigenous woman who was murdered in February at age 26 — to launch the #AmINext hashtag earlier this month.
So, what’s being done about it? | Follow micdotcom