Marc Latham has specialised in blogging and writing articles, and is hoping to gain further experience in these fields throughout 2011.
Other media and research projects ideas are also very welcome.
Marc is particularly interested in learning and reporting about the mysteries of life on Earth.
Trying to fill in the gaps between and beyond:
Mystery Tour
Birth is unremembered
Life is uncertain
Death is unknown.
Together they are one
big mystery tour.
And images too.
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A greenygrey outlook can help people cope with the British weather in three ways:
Firstly, in the UK more days have grey skies than blue, so if you wake up hoping for blue skies every day you will be disappointed more often than not, and get the day off to a bad start.
Secondly, when you add the green on the ground to your view it lightens up the grey days, so they don't seem so dull.
Finally, if you think most days have grey skies, you are more likely to do something with the clear days and get the most out of them.
The green and grey are also symbolic of the divide between nature and human construction, one of the burning issues in the twenty-first century world.
Although the greenygrey recognises the need for buildings and transport links, it hopes the impact on the environment can be kept to a minimum, and that the remaining green spaces can be preserved and protected.
It thinks this is not only important for the wildlife living in such areas but also for human welfare, as most people need to see more than just endless grey.
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