分享是种美德。 [我不是在玩游戏,我是在随便乱改游戏啦]

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cs1.6 vardant model

vardant model repalace for cs1.6

seng 胜

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 Xbow [弓] 

[cs1.6] Xbow [弓] 好久没弄模型了~随便弄了把弓,朋友给了提议后 ,试试改后的模型

monster hunter weapon

Monster hunter weapon for cs1.6

Red queen

[cs1.6] red queen 绯红皇后knife 更新 贴图 ver 2

神秘的索科特拉岛(印度洋)

在也门沿海的印度洋中,坐落着一座神奇的岛屿:索科特拉岛。该岛与大陆板块已经隔绝1800万年,长期的地理隔离生成了很多只有在该岛才存在的动植物。在索科特拉岛825种植物中,有37%是其特有的;90%的爬行动物和95%的蜗牛也是岛上独有的。由于其稀有生物品种多,因此被认为是“印度洋的加拉帕戈斯”。坐落于也门沿岸的印度洋内,索科特拉岛拥有世界上最神奇和奇特的植物物种。在该岛800多种植物物种中,有超过1/3的物种是其所特有的,在其他地方没有分布。

Claw

瞬间有了idea随便制作了这个爪子, 该取名为什么呢?

Friday, January 7, 2011

In pictures: How the world is changing


Introduction


While the effect of human activity on the global climate is hotly debated, physical signs of environmental change are all around us.Some scientists say an increase in the rate of melting of the world's glaciers is evidence of global warming.
Argentina's Upsala Glacier was once the biggest in South America, but it is now disappearing at a rate of 200 metres per year.
Other scientists say its reduction is due to complicated shifts in glacial dynamics and local geology.




Glacial change


American photographer Gary Braasch has been documenting images of environmental change since 1999.The image on the left is from an 1859 etching of the Rhone glacier in Valais, Switzerland, and shows ice filling the valley.
In 2001, the glacier had shrunk by some 2.5km, and its 'snout' had shifted about 450 metres higher up.
Image: Gary Braasch ©






Rising tides


Some scientists predict that a warmer climate will trigger more violent storms, which will cause increased rates of coastal erosion.This is a section of shoreline at Cape Hatteras in North Carolina in the USA, pictured in 1999 and 2004. The southern United States and Caribbean region were battered by a series of powerful hurricanes last year.
Rising sea levels are also expected to speed up coastal erosion.
Image: Gary Braasch ©




Vanishing islands


Other parts of the world could face even more drastic change.The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), a consortium of several thousand independent scientists, predicts that sea levels could rise by between 9 and 88cm in the next century.
This would threaten low-lying islands such as Tuvalu in the Pacific. These images, taken this year, show the effects of a higher than usual tide.
Image: Gary Braasch ©


No snow


As the climate warms up, mountainous regions may experience lower levels of snowfall.This image shows Mount Hood in Oregon at the same time in late summer in 1985 and 2002.
Image: Gary Braasch ©
More pests


Tree-eating wood beetles are likely to benefit from a warmer climate and reproduce in ever-increasing numbers.These images show damage to White Spruce trees in Alaska caused by the pests.
Image: Gary Braasch ©

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