Source: lindahall
Rumpler C.IV. “SNETA Rumpler C IV O-BRUN ready for a passenger flight from Haren airfield in 1920. German military markings are still visible on the upper wings.”
Source: cinemagreats
Source: enginedynamicsinc
A map of the famous Nazca lines.
Source: bluetramontana.com
Source: sexyswedishbabe
Source: coppermetropolis
“Norman Clyde was attracted to the Sierra Nevada Mountains sometime after 1911 while in his mid-20s… Clyde spent more than 50 years perfecting his mental maps, locating crashed airplanes, and rescuing lost souls and climbers in trouble - or retrieving their bodies.
Clyde’s name was legendary. Many climbers would rank him second only to John Muir as an intimate pioneer of places inaccessible and second to none as a climber… Clyde climbed Mt. Whitney at least 50 times. Between 1914 and about 1940, he became the first climber to reach the tops of at least 126 peaks.”
Norman Clyde on Starlight Peak, North Palisades, Sierra Nevada Mountains, 1931.












