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AWHHH YEAHHH SUMMER YEAH. #lolwhatexams #college #summer
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Last study hurdle, hoping this’ll get me through. :’) #study #redbull #summercountdown
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Came across this in the fridge. What even. :’L #lololol #siblings
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Just came in the post, bittuva green theme going on, whatevs. Psyched to get shtuck into these after work on Saturday! :3 #ears #0g #green #bodyjewelrysource.com
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186 photos of the sunset merged into one image using the lighten layer-blending mode in photoshop. I like the pattern in the clouds created from the interval between shots.
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Well, I know what I’m doing today. #studybreak #awhhyeahh #pokemon #gameboycolour
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pros to being a jellyfish
- ur cute n beautiful
- you never have to go to college
- ur parents dont judge u
- ur allowed 2 be sassy dont get near my tentacles silly boys ill kill you
- whats a gender
- u just look amazing and float around all day wooooo
cons to being a jellyfish
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- if album titles were honest
- take this to your grave: i fucking fucking hate you so fucking much and i hate myself twice as fucking much
- from under the cork tree: i really wanna have sex with you but i also wanna kill myself
- infinity on high: i dont really wanna do this anymore (you and the suicidal thoughts)
- folie a deux: life is good and i hope it stays that way
- believers never die: bye bitches
- save rock and roll: we're back bitches
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Espeon and Umbreon by request.
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Mapping the Embryonic Epigenome: How Genes Are Turned On and Off During Early Human Development
May 9, 2013 — A large, multi-institutional research team involved in the NIH Epigenome Roadmap Project has published a sweeping analysis in the current issue of the journal Cell of how genes are turned on and off to direct early human development. Led by Bing Ren of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Joseph Ecker of The Salk Institute for Biological Studies and James Thomson of the Morgridge Institute for Research, the scientists also describe novel genetic phenomena likely to play a pivotal role not only in the genesis of the embryo, but that of cancer as well. Their publicly available data, the result of more than four years of experimentation and analysis, will contribute significantly to virtually every subfield of the biomedical sciences.
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