We are stardust.
from fossilesque@mander.xyz to science_memes@mander.xyz on 08 Sep 2024 16:19
https://mander.xyz/post/17792104

#science_memes

threaded - newest

SandmanXC@lemmy.world on 08 Sep 2024 16:29 next collapse

There’s stardust all over my basement walls 😌

otter@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Sep 2024 20:22 collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/pictrs/image/68fad93e-d108-4a58-9b91-e4ce8c4c49d3.webp">

blanketswithsmallpox@lemmy.world on 08 Sep 2024 22:10 collapse

Stardust got everywhere…

<img alt="" src="https://www.meme-arsenal.com/memes/b6755f432d7c9441529b9bcd950e9621.jpg">

MF_COOM@hexbear.net on 08 Sep 2024 16:52 next collapse

Wait till this person finds out about basically every other element they’re made of

DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social on 08 Sep 2024 22:10 collapse

This made me look up what the actual ratios of elemental composition in the human body are, and I learned we’re 67% oxygen by atomic mass, which makes sense, with only 9.5% hydrogen, but I still find that idea that we’re mostly oxygen oddly upsetting.

brianary@startrek.website on 08 Sep 2024 17:08 next collapse

I learned this from Professor Moby.

Maeve@kbin.earth on 08 Sep 2024 17:13 next collapse

We are stardust, we are golden, we are billion year old carbon, and we've got to get ourselves back to the garden.

Joni Mitchell

Bishma@discuss.tchncs.de on 08 Sep 2024 17:21 next collapse

Elemental iron is star poison.

<img alt="We are star poison Death Metal band style logo" src="https://i.postimg.cc/d1kQxyJ9/starpoison.png">

southsamurai@sh.itjust.works on 08 Sep 2024 22:35 collapse

\m/

Num10ck@lemmy.world on 08 Sep 2024 17:41 next collapse

i remember hearing that this was an ancient native american lesson long before it was understood by science. how they could have known this? are they a remnant of a previously more developed society?

OpenStars@discuss.online on 08 Sep 2024 17:56 next collapse

They probably meant something entirely different - as in not so much that we are literally made of elemental materials forged in a burning sphere in space (a “reductionist” viewpoint) but rather than we contain an “aspect” of star-stuff, i.e. we may be animals that come from the earth, but we also contain within us an aspect of even the stars (more “holistic”?).

And perhaps beyond, if you believe that aspects of our Minds transcend physical reality itself - e.g. if we were a computer game but like, we could have been talking butterflies rather than talking apes, yet we were modelled after a “higher” world, to have five fingers on each hand and to be able to write our own stories, even make our own computer simulations “below” us.

Anyway there is no need to presume that they would have meant it in such an extremely literal manner as is common today.

otter@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Sep 2024 20:23 collapse

Tell Lemmy you’re high as balls without saying you’re high as balls.

JudahBenHur@lemm.ee on 08 Sep 2024 21:24 collapse

but aztec

otter@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Sep 2024 21:51 collapse

More like High-As “tech”.

Window_Error_Noises@lemmy.world on 08 Sep 2024 19:35 next collapse

Shit, dude. My iron was at 2 after my last blood test. They keep pumping me full of star stuff–pow, straight in the veins–and I just keep burning through it. Why, stars, why! Why does thou forsake me! I am very tired, stars.

flicker@lemmy.world on 08 Sep 2024 20:58 collapse

And probably cold, too.

simonweiss@lemmy.ml on 08 Sep 2024 19:49 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/c0df0add-ee35-4ab3-9a04-6274a2787075.webp">

Eheran@lemmy.world on 08 Sep 2024 20:12 next collapse

Incorrect, the hydrogen is mostly from the big bang. Not to mention that neutron star mergers produced a while lot of the heavier stuff.

tate@lemmy.sdf.org on 08 Sep 2024 21:00 next collapse

If that hydrogen was previously incorporated in a star, I think it’s fair to call it stardust. That’s very likely, since our solar system would have formed from a relatively dense cloud of the remnants of earlier stars, with just a smidge of primordial hydrogen mixed in.

Eheran@lemmy.world on 08 Sep 2024 21:13 next collapse

grumpy I guess

brbposting@sh.itjust.works on 08 Sep 2024 21:29 collapse

Tell me more about primordial hydrogen?!

DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social on 08 Sep 2024 21:55 next collapse

It just means the remnants of the Big Bang that mostly created hydrogen, helium, and lithium. There’s nothing particularly special about it other than the possibility that it is as old as creation because there are stable isotopes.

tate@lemmy.sdf.org on 08 Sep 2024 22:01 collapse

All of the hydrogen was created at the initial cooling of the big bang. In this case what I mean by primordial, is that it was never part of a larger composite object like a star.

ininewcrow@lemmy.ca on 08 Sep 2024 21:03 collapse

I also like the science behind particles like neutrinos blasting their way through everything in space and matter, even through our own bodies and cells. Every once in a while, one of those tiny particles hits a piece of DNA at just the right spot to cause a chain reaction that leads to a new minor or major mutation in the next generation. It’s generally thought that this kind of physics is one of forces that drive evolution of all lifeforms on our planet.

We are made of star stuff … and we are and will always be affected by star energy.

propter_hog@hexbear.net on 08 Sep 2024 20:54 collapse

JFC

iAvicenna@lemmy.world on 08 Sep 2024 22:14 next collapse

dont tell emos that there is a dead star inside them, they are already having a difficult time as is

Hestia@hexbear.net on 09 Sep 2024 00:21 next collapse

I’ve heard this so many fucking times I want to blow up the sun so I never have to hear it again.

aspensmonster@lemmygrad.ml on 09 Sep 2024 00:48 collapse

“in the highest exalted way”

yewtu.be/watch?v=8g4d-rnhuSg