Il migliore video da youtube su The Doors - The Best Of The Doors (Disc 2)
999: 9 Hours, 9 Persons, 9 Doors OST - Morphogenetic Sorrow by asukacrystalrose | >> 999: 9 Hours, 9 Persons, 9 Doors OST - Morphogenetic Sorrow by asukacrystalrose | >> 999: 9Hours, 9 Persons, 9 Doors OST / Extreme Escape 9 Hours 9 Persons 9 Doors OST Disc 2, Track 11 - Morphogenetic Sorrow Composer: Shinji Hosoe (SuperSweep Inc) All music is copyrighted by Chunsoft, all rights reserved (and by extension, Aksys Games). No copyright infringement has been intended
L'ultimo video da youtube su The Doors - The Best Of The Doors (Disc 2)
Solar Eclipse: Millions Look Up for 'Ring of Fire' IMAGE OF THE 2012 ECLIPSE by breakingnewsreport | >> Solar Eclipse: Millions Look Up for 'Ring of Fire' For one night, millions of eyes look up to the 'Ring of Fire.' Millions around the world are set to watch the annular solar eclipse, in which the moon passes in front of the sun leaving only a golden ring around its edges, which will be visible to wide areas across Asia Monday morning, parts of the western United States and even some parts of Mexico will catch a glimpse. Parts of eastern Asia were being treated to a solar spectacle as the moon slid across the sun, creating a "ring of fire." Sky-watchers in the western US awaited their turns as the rare phenomenon was due to move over the Pacific and toward them later Sunday. Scientists cautioned would-be viewers everywhere to be very careful because the sun's damaging rays will remain powerful even during the annular solar eclipse. The advice: Either wear specially designed protective eyewear or attend a viewing event — at a planetarium or amateur astronomy club, for example — to avoid risk of serious eye injury. Local weather permitting, the solar spectacle was first visible in parts of eastern Asia around dawn Monday, local time. If skies were clear enough, early risers there were able to catch the ring eclipse. Later, the late day sun (on Sunday in the US) will transform into a glowing ring in southwest Oregon, Northern California, central Nevada, southern Utah, northern Arizona and New Mexico and finally the Texas Panhandle. For 3 ½ hours, the eclipse follows an 8500 ...