published on
'we've found 'te m weary after having stope/scuff'd/bone/brittle'd: ire....... tough luck for one affable amphibole - '
EDITOR's NOTE:
entry 2−3, entry 5, entry 8, entry 22, etc compile'd here for ease of access...
-chapters've yet to be outsourced (add to triage)
-please be patient as we are a small team of volunteers
-we are nameless, we are faceless, we are decentralizerifyz'd to the umpteenth integral
with that being said, (from the insleeve left-most leaflet, °124b):
'beta sonification - testr grecover'd subterranean amphibolite, un unnaturally large coagulated clump of horneblende:
H = 5–6; CL = 2 at approx. 120° and 60°; Greenish dark gray
to black; S = pale gray if any; D = 3.0–3.3; L = vitreous; Habit
= prismatic with diamond-shaped cross-section'
another excerpt (fuck if i care [or know, this could very well be an excerpt of a dream]):
bottled and brew'd with love from our living room!
we were caked with mud and soot for weeks after the expedition, but i'd wager it'll all have paid for itself in a year or two's time,,
often tough toil takes a tirade or two to get the dust to settle, and a new dawn upon our dew soak'd backpacks...
⋯
i saw it in the distance, a single monument towering above all else. as we worked our way around the base in search of an opening, i started to realize what all the fuss was about. i daub'd atthe corner of my forhead for sweat. it was almost surreal even fo\u0064\u0072\u0065\u0061\u006d i poked my head in after a heated spat of internal dialogue against my better judgement and looked around. each clod was larger than the last that caught my eye. this is no regular occurance, and the only remaining species of it's kind. Most species grow as filamentous, microscopic structures called hyphae or as budding single cells (yeasts). Many interconnected hyphae form a thallus usually referred to as the mycelium, which—when visible to the naked eye (macroscopic)—is commonly called mold. During sexual reproduction, many Ascomycota typically produce large numbers of asci. The ascus is often contained in a multicellular, occasionally readily visible fruiting structure, the ascocarp (also called an ascoma). Ascocarps come in a very large variety of shapes: cup-shaped, club-shaped, potato-like, spongy, seed-like, oozing and pimple-like, coral-like, nit-like, golf-ball-shaped, perforated tennis ball-like, cushion-shaped, plated and feathered in miniature (Laboulbeniales), microscopic classic Greek shield-shaped, stalked or sessile. They can appear solitary or clustered. Their texture can likewise be very variable, including fleshy, like charcoal (carbonaceous), leathery, rubbery, gelatinous, slimy, powdery, or cob-web-like. Ascocarps come in multiple colors such as red, orange, yellow, brown, black, or, more rarely, green or blue. Some ascomyceous fungi, such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae, grow as single-celled yeasts, which—during sexual reproduction—develop into an ascus, and do not form fruiting bodies. But don't take my word for it, hear for yourself:'
- Genre
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