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Chilika Lake – The Jewel of Odisha Chilika Lake is India’s largest coastal lagoon, located in the beautiful state of Odisha. It is where rivers meet the Bay of Bengal, creating a stunning mix of freshwater and seawater ecosystem . This natural wonder is not just a lake—it’s a living world full of biodiversity and scenic beauty. Why Chilika Lake is special: Asia’s largest wintering ground for migratory birds Home to rare Irrawaddy dolphins Beautiful islands like Kalijai Island Major fishing hub supporting thousands of families Recognized as a Ramsar Wetland of international importance Every winter, the lake turns into a paradise of flying birds arriving from Siberia, Central Asia, and beyond. Read the Full Article: https://www.weejix.com/topic/chilika-lake-odisha
Hey so how the fuck does geography work? Idk what I want from this but is their a way to make my map for my TTRPG look more interesting. I plan to add some mountains to the center of the land mass that looks like a stingray and some clouds around the flouting islands. I might be getting a little neurotic with all these details but it’s my first time DMing and I just want my world to feel alive to my players. Any advice is appreciated :)
The Afterlife of a Lingua Franca: Tracing the Survival of Mobilian Jargon in Later Languages and Cultural Artifacts Introduction When a contact language falls silent, it rarely vanishes without remainder. The question of “survival” is more delicate than the binary of living versus dead language suggests, because a pidgin can perish as a functioning medium of communication while leaving sediment in the languages that outlived it—in place names, regional vocabulary, idiom, and even in performed verbal culture whose original meaning has been forgotten by those who recite it…. The Afterlife of a Lingua Franca: Tracing the Survival of Mobilian Jargon in Later Languages and Cultural Artifacts
I love world building geography and creating horrifying folklore or myths that actually have a perfectly reasonable scientific explanation that the people are oblivious to. I gently adore when stuff like this happens in stories and maybe I’m looking in the wrong places but I feel like no one plays with this concept enough. That the characters believe there is something mythical or supernatural going on because they lack the science to understand it instead of it actually being some magical thing. An example: Characters : these people trespassed and made god mad so god stole them while they slept. That is why they are all just lying in this valley with no obvious cause of death and sleeping peacefully. God sucked the air out of their lungs. But in all reality it’s just a Carbon Dioxide sink.
Blueprint Before Pixels: Smarter Sites Start Here The Digital Cartography Revolution: Why “Blueprint Before Pixels” Matters Now In an era where real-time satellite feeds, drone swarms, and hyperspectral sensors generate petabytes of data daily, the temptation for web designers and digital product teams is to dive straight into the visual layer…. Blueprint Before Pixels: Smarter Sites Start Here
Dal Lake: The Jewel of Srinagar and Kashmir’s Natural Wonder Dal Lake is one of the most famous freshwater lakes in India and a major attraction in Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir. Known for its scenic beauty, houseboats, floating gardens, and traditional shikaras, the lake has earned the title “Jewel of Srinagar.” Surrounded by the majestic Himalayas, Dal Lake plays an important role in the region’s tourism, culture, and local economy. Visitors from around the world come to experience its peaceful waters, vibrant floating markets, and breathtaking landscapes. Beyond its beauty, the lake is an important ecological resource that supports local communities and diverse aquatic life. Conservation efforts continue to focus on preserving this iconic natural treasure for future generations. Read the complete article here: https://www.weejix.com/topic/dal-lake
Where the antelope play & the escalators don’t. I’m talking about the state of Wyoming, U.S.A. Would you believe there are only 2 escalators in the entire state? It all has to do with their low population (590,784), the lowest population in the U.S.—about 580,000 people spread across 97,000 sq mi (251,000 km²). That’s roughly 6 people per sq mi (2.3 per sq km). Most of Wyoming’s towns are built wide, not tall. When land is cheap & abundant, you build outward, not upward. Wyoming has very few malls, transit hubs, convention centers, or large office towers. The biggest city, Cheyenne, has only about 65,000 people. So they don’t need escalators. Escalators are expensive. They cost $100,000-$200,000 to install and another $5,000-$20,000 to maintain. For a small Wyoming building, that’s like buying a Ferrari just to move people up 1 floor. They are simple people who like to walk & don’t mind the exercise. They have only 2 escalators in Casper, both in banks.
Fellows of the Royal Canadian Geographical Society Fellows of the RCGS on Bluesky One of Bluesky’s most attractive qualities is that it has become the platform of choice for social discussion of high-quality research and inquiry. I am compiling the Starter Pack below, of my colleagues at the Royal Canadian Geographical Society who use Bluesky to share their activities as explorers, scientists, and educators. I am in constant awe of their work. If you are at Bluesky, I think you would find them well worth following. 🦋 https://go.bsky.app/SoLdURJ
Indus River: Origin, Tributaries and Importance The Indus River is one of the longest and most historically significant rivers in Asia. It originates near Lake Manasarovar in Tibet and flows through India and Pakistan before emptying into the Arabian Sea. The river played a vital role in the development of the ancient Indus Valley Civilization , one of the world’s earliest urban cultures. Its water supports agriculture, livelihoods, and ecosystems across a vast region. Key highlights: Origin of the Indus River Major tributaries Historical significance Economic and agricultural importance Role in the Indus Valley Civilization Learn more about the geography, history, and importance of the Indus River: https://www.weejix.com/topic/indus-river
Map: Parks, Tree Canopy, and Bird Observations in Detroit Showing a map of the City of Detroit with an overlay of tree canopy cover and highlighting the boundaries of city parks. Further, there are over a quarter million points on the map representing bird observations that have been submitted to the eBird application. The legend shows the exact colors of the point data. Where alternative colors arise (e.g. green or black dots), it is a result of… Map: Parks, Tree Canopy, and Bird Observations in Detroit
Facebook One of the most famous cave systems in North America formed inside an ancient reef that was later hollowed out by acid rising from deep underground. Carlsbad Caverns in southeastern New Mexico sits within the Guadalupe Mountains, but the rock around it did not begin as mountains. Around 250 million years ago, this region was part of a warm inland sea, where marine organisms built a massive reef along the edge of an ancient basin. Over time, that reef was buried, hardened into limestone, and later uplifted into dry desert mountains. Most limestone caves form when weakly acidic rainwater seeps downward from the surface. Carlsbad is different. Its largest chambers were carved mainly by sulfuric acid that formed when hydrogen sulfide gas rose from deep oil and gas deposits and mixed with oxygen-rich groundwater. That acid attacked the limestone from below. Instead of narrow stream-carved passages, the process dissolved huge underground rooms, including the Big Room, one of the largest cave chambers in North America. Later, as the cave drained and air entered the system, dripping mineral-rich water created stalactites, stalagmites, columns, and other formations. Human history followed the cave’s biology. Large bat colonies used the natural entrance, and their guano became valuable fertilizer. In the early 1900s, guano mining brought people into the cave before tourism and exploration transformed it into a national park. Carlsbad Caverns looks like a hidden underground cathedral, but its story began as an ancient reef, then became a desert mountain, then was hollowed out from below by one of the most unusual cave-forming processes on Earth.
Structure Over Personality: Jefferson Davis, the Department System, and the Western Command Problem Abstract The case studies assembled in this volume have proceeded dyad by dyad, treating each relationship between Jefferson Davis and a general as the unit of analysis…. Structure Over Personality: Jefferson Davis, the Department System, and the Western Command Problem
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