Science - Kerbal Space Program Wiki (2024)

For the game mode, see science mode.

For the parts, see parts#Science.

An image of the GUI after doing an EVA report

Science is a gameplay feature used to unlock parts in the technology tree when playing in the Career or Science modes by spending science points, which are mainly obtained by performing various scientific activities in different situations and biomes. Science may also be obtained upon successful completion of certain contracts, or gained through the implementation of administrative strategies. Science must either be recovered or transmitted in order to be used on Kerbin to unlock additional technologies. While transmission is generally not for 100% value, experiments may be repeated and retransmitted, often gaining more science value than the transmit window shows. Experiments can be removed from the parts they were performed in and are stored with a Kerbal on EVA. Additionally, science experiments can be stored in and retrieved from any part that Kerbals can ride in, although only one copy of an experiment for any specific situation (e.g. EVA report flying over Kerbin's shores) can be stored per command pod. Science and all related instruments and buildings are made inoperative while in Sandbox mode due to its triviality—all parts are available from the start of a Sandbox game.

In addition to the facts collected on this page, you can follow this beginner-friendly Science tutorial.

Contents

  • 1 Situations
  • 2 Biomes
  • 3 Activities
    • 3.1 Possible combinations of Activity, Situation, and Biome
    • 3.2 Crew
      • 3.2.1 Surface Sample
      • 3.2.2 EVA Report
      • 3.2.3 EVA Experiments
      • 3.2.4 Asteroid Sample
      • 3.2.5 Comet Sample
      • 3.2.6 Crew Report
    • 3.3 Modules
      • 3.3.1 Table of science modules
      • 3.3.2 Recovering the maximum value of an experiment
        • 3.3.2.1 Repeated experiment value
    • 3.4 Craft recovery
  • 4 Celestial body multipliers
  • 5 Contracts
  • 6 Acquisition Strategies
  • 7 Administrative Strategies
  • 8 Science Archives
  • 9 Breaking ground science experiments
    • 9.1 Robotic arm scan
    • 9.2 Deployable science

Situations

Situations reflect the flight status of the craft or kerbonaut relative to a celestial body. There are six possible situations, some of which may be irrelevant to a given science activity or unavailable on a given celestial body.

  • SrfLanded: in contact with the terrestrial surface
  • SrfSplashed: in a liquid body on the surface (such as oceans)
  • Flying Low: above the surface at any height, if and only if an atmosphere is present
  • Flying High: in the upper atmosphere, if and only if an atmosphere is present
  • In Space Low: above the surface at any height and not in an atmosphere
  • In Space High: high above the surface and any atmosphere but still in its SOI

An atmosphere is required for the situations "Flying Low" and "Flying High" and for usage of the Atmospheric Fluid Spectro-Variometer. As of KSP version 1.0.2, the PresMat Barometer can be used without an atmosphere. If soaring through an upper or lower atmosphere on a trajectory to an escape from the planet or moon's sphere of influence, the situation is assigned as "In Space Low" regardless of the presence of the atmosphere. The situation will only change to "Flying High" or "Flying Low" if/when the aerodynamic forces cause an orbit to be captured during the encounter.

Biomes

Biomes are areas of a body's surface specially mapped in KSP game data. Each additional biome grants a separate set of opportunities to do Science Activities, provided the Activity is biome-dependent in the given Situation. Each planet with solid surface and each moon has biomes, because of this several biomes have to be visited with landers or rovers for total research of the given celestial body.

Activities

This is an overview of all science activities which can be performed and how results differ by biome and situation. Activities performed within one sphere of influence(SOI) have no effect on the Science Points that can be earned doing science activities within the SOI of any other celestial body.

Possible combinations of Activity, Situation, and Biome

The top row of the chart names each Activity; the left hand column shows the six possible Situations.

Each intersection shows whether the Activity is possible for a given Situation and, if so, whether it differs by Biome or gives one Global result for the entire celestial body.

Activities and situations requiring an atmosphere are italicized and colored. Surface: Splashed currently can only be accomplished on Kerbin, Eve, and Laythe.

Kerbonaut Capsule Modules
Surface Sample EVA Report EVA Experiments Asteroid Sample Comet Sample Crew Report Mystery Goo Observation Materials Study Temperature Scan Atmospheric Pressure Scan Gravity Scan Seismic Scan Atmosphere Analysis Infrared Telescope Magnetometer Boom
Surface: LandedBiomeBiomeGlobalBiomeBiomeBiomeBiomeBiomeBiomeBiomeBiomeBiomeBiome
Surface: SplashedBiomeBiomeBiomeBiomeBiomeBiomeBiomeBiomeBiomeBiome
Flying LowBiomeBiomeBiomeBiomeGlobalGlobalBiomeGlobalBiome
Flying HighGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalBiome
In Space LowBiomeGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalBiomeGlobal
In Space HighGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalBiomeGlobalGlobal

Crew

The following Activities are performed by Kerbals during an EVA or from within a crewed command module.

Surface Sample

Requires One kerbonaut
Data size 30 Mits
Base value 30
Maximum value 40
Data scale 1
Transmission efficiency 25%
Processing energy 300⚡

Surface Samples can be taken by kerbonauts when performing an EVA on the ground (or from on top of a landed or splashed craft) or in water of a celestial body. The results vary by biome and situation (landed or splashed) just as with craft. However, there is one detail to note: a Kerbal swimming in the water is splashed, but a Kerbal standing on top of a splashed craft is landed. So two different surface samples can be collected from any floating craft.

In Career mode, Surface Samples cannot be taken without having the Research and Development Facility and Astronaut Complex upgraded to second level.

EVA Report

Requires One kerbonaut
Data size 8 Mits
Base value 8
Maximum value 8
Data scale 1
Transmission efficiency 100%
Processing energy 80⚡

EVA Reports are performed by kerbonauts on an EVA. The results vary by biome and situation (landed, splashed, or "flying"). There is one detail to note: a Kerbal swimming in the water is splashed, but a Kerbal standing on top of a splashed craft is landed — up to three different EVA reports can be collected from any floating craft. The easiest ways to take a Flying Low report are to jump from the surface or hang onto a ladder.

Only one EVA Report per biome/situation combination is necessary. A kerbonaut can only take and hold one EVA Report at a time without storing it in a Command Pod, though reports retrieved from a Command Pod have no limitations on how many of a type can be carried.

EVA Experiments

Requires One kerbonaut
Data size 25 Mits
Base value 25
Maximum value 25
Data scale 1
Transmission efficiency 100%
Processing energy 250⚡

EVA Experiments are performed by kerbonauts on an EVA, using the EVA Experiments Kit. The kerbonaut may not hold on to a ladder when doing the experiment. This type of science was added in version 1.11.

Asteroid Sample

Requires
  • One kerbonaut
  • One Asteroid
Data size 60 Mits
Base value 60
Maximum value 70
Data scale 1
Transmission efficiency 30%
Processing energy 600⚡

Asteroid Samples can be taken by kerbonauts when performing an EVA close to an asteroid. The samples give various results depending on the altitude of the orbiting planet.

Comet Sample

Requires
  • One kerbonaut
  • One Comet
PeriodShortIntermediateLongInterstellar
Data size 90 Mits 135 Mits 270 Mits 900 Mits
Base value 90 135 270 900
Maximum value 100 150 300 1000
Data scale 1 1 1 1
Transmission efficiency 60% 60% 60% 60%
Processing energy 900⚡ 1350⚡ 2700⚡ 9000⚡

Comet Samples can be taken by kerbonauts when performing an EVA close to a comet. The samples give various results depending on the altitude of orbit and situation. The science produced depends on the period of the comet.

Crew Report

Requires A manned command pod
Data size 5 Mits
Base value 5
Maximum value 5
Data scale 1
Transmission efficiency 100%
Processing energy 50⚡

Crew Reports can be created in any manned command pod. Reports uniquely differ between celestial body and situation. Because the transmission efficiency is 100%, repeating them or transmitting them multiple times yields no additional Science.

If a command pod has taken a Crew Report but not transmitted it, it cannot take a new report even when in a new situation, biome, or sphere of influence. This limitation can be circumvented by having a kerbonaut on EVA "take data" from the command pod. Even if they store the data in the same command pod it was taken from, the Crew Report will be treated as just another piece of data to store. A second Crew Report can be taken even in exactly the same spot; no additional points are yielded by duplicate Crew Reports though.

Modules

Experiments done by separate parts like the Mystery Goo™ Containment Unit behave similarly to Crew Reports. They may be performed in different flight phases and on different celestial bodies returning different results. Each module can only store one result at a time, but a result can be sent home with an antenna to allow the experiment to be performed again under the same or under new conditions. Data can also be extracted from the module by a kerbonaut during an EVA. There is a penalty for transmitting data home instead of recovering the module to Kerbin.

Since version 0.23, transmitting or collecting data renders the Mystery Goo™ Containment Unit and SC-9001 Science Jr. disabled for the remainder of a flight. If the craft has (or can be docked with) a fully crewed lab, it can reset those modules at a cost of time and electric charge. Since version 1.0, these modules can also be reset by a scientist on EVA, allowing a craft with a scientist on board to collect multiple results (from different situations and biomes) on a single mission, without needing a full lab as part of the craft. The results collected and stored during a mission can be transferred to a lab at the end of the mission (or taken back to Kerbin).

Table of science modules

Experiment Mystery Goo Observation Temperature Scan Atmospheric Pressure Scan Materials Study Seismic Scan Atmosphere Analysis Infrared Telescope Magnetometer Report Gravity Scan
Required part (tech tree lvl) Mystery Goo™ Containment Unit (1) 2HOT Thermometer (2) PresMat Barometer (3) SC-9001 Science Jr. (4) Double-C Seismic Accelerometer (7) Atmospheric Fluid Spectro-Variometer (7) SENTINEL Infrared Telescope (7) Magnetometer Boom (7) GRAVMAX Negative Gravioli Detector (8)
Data size 10 Mits 8 Mits 12 Mits 25 Mits 50 Mits 200 Mits 30 Mits 45 Mits 60 Mits
Base value 10 8 12 25 20 20 15 45 20
Maximum value 13 8 12 32 22 24 22 45 22
Data scale 1 1 1 1 2.5 10 2 1 3
Transmission efficiency 30% 50% 50% 35% 45% 60% 40% 60% 40%
Processing energy (⚡) 100 80 120 250 500 2000 300 450 600

The transmission efficiency caps the maximum returnable science with the experiment via antennae. To gather all scientific value experiments needs to be recovered. With the release of 1.0, transmission efficiency drops radically on experiments that have already been performed and transmitted. If an experiment is recovered, transmission efficiency for that experiment drops to zero (situation and biome specific).

Recovering the maximum value of an experiment

Experiments that have a maximum value different from the minimum value will only give a certain percentage of its remaining value, this percentage can be calculated using the formula: Minimum value/ Maximum value.Consequently, these experiments can be repeated to get more fractions of the remaining points. An effective way to do this is by recovering multiple copies of an experiment. This can easily be accomplished by storing the experiments inside multiple Experiment Storage Units and then recovering it.

Repeated experiment value
Experiment Mystery Goo Observation Temperature Scan Atmospheric Pressure Scan Materials Study Seismic Scan Atmosphere Analysis Infrared Telescope Magnetometer Report Gravity Scan
Percentage 1 → 77%
2 → 95%
3 → 99%
4 → 100%
1 → 100% 1 → 100% 1 → 78%
2 → 95%
3 → 99%
4 → 100%
1 → 91%
2 → 99%
1 → 83%
2 → 97%
3 → 100%
1 → 68%
2 → 90%
3 → 97%
4 → 99%
1 → 100% 1 → 91%
2 → 99%

You will need at most 4 copies (experiments with higher percentages need less) of an experiment to get close enough to 100% for it to be noticeable in the Archives section.

Take Mystery Goo for example. With base value of 10 and maximum value of 13, each consecutive experiment will yield 10/13 ≈ 77% of the remaining value.That results in the following numbers - assuming a location multiplier of 1×, such as LKO.

Repetition Experiment value Cumulative value
#1 76.92% 10.0⚛
#2 17.75% 2.3⚛ 94.67% 12.3⚛
#3 4.10% 0.5⚛ 98.77% 12.8⚛
#4 0.95% 0.1⚛ 99.72% 13.0⚛

Note: in the Archives section it is shown how many science points have been obtained from an experiment - right-most column, labelled "Science" - with two decimal digits (0.01) precision.In order to max out this value, the worst case is the Infrared Telescope in Low Orbit around Eeloo: you will need 10 copies of the experiment!

Craft recovery

Celestial Body Flyby Orbital Flight Suborbital Flight Atmospheric Flight Surface Landed
Kerbin Base Value N/A 10 8 5 N/A
Max Value N/A 12 9.6 6 N/A
Other Base Value 6 8 10 12 15
Max Value 7.2 9.6 12 14.4 18
The Base- and Max Value of celestial bodies other than Kerbin have to be multiplied by their body-specific recovery multiplier listed below.

Recovering any craft with a command module after flight will yield science points based on the most scientifically valuable phase (based on Max Value*Celestial body multiplier) of the journey. As seen in the table the value of each phase increases the closer a spacecraft has been to orbit. The opposite is true for other celestial bodies. In order to earn recovery science from atmospheric flight, the craft cannot reach a suborbital trajectory, as this would become marked as the most valuable phase of the flight. This is even the case when many suborbital flights have been performed before it, and science returns would be effectively higher from a craft that only experienced flight. The different phases are defined as follows:

  • Flyby: Only the periapsis is within the SOI.
  • Orbit: The periapsis and apoapsis are within the SOI and the orbit does not intersect the surface.
  • Suborbit: The ship is above and the periapsis is inside the atmosphere or the surface.
  • Flight: The body is within the atmosphere.
  • Landed: The craft is touching the surface of the body.
  • Splashed down: The ship is touching water without touching the ground. It cannot touch the ground because, for example, it is possible to be Landed on Kerbin's water if you get a ship to sink to the ocean floor.


To receive science closer to the maximum science value in one trip, it is possible to have multiple command modules on a craft which can separate when landed so "multiple craft" can be recovered. Decouplers or separators can be used for this, when using light probe cores ejection force should be reduced as to avoid high velocity lithobraking.

Celestial body multipliers

Each celestial body has different multipliers applied to the collected scientific data, based upon where it is taken in relation to that body. Biomes do not affect these multipliers.

The altitudes given in this table determine the altitude above mean sea level of the boundary between lower and upper atmosphere and between near and outer space. The upper atmosphere extends to the atmospheric height and the outer space extends up to the end of the sphere of influence.

Surface Atmosphere Space Total
Celestial body Landed Splashed Low High Border Limit Low High Border Recovery Total Science Total Data
Kerbol N/A N/A 18km 600km 11× 1000Mm
Moho 10× N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 80km
Eve 22km 90km 400km
Gilly N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 6km
Kerbin 0.3× 0.4× 0.7× 0.9× 18km 70km 1.5× 250km
Mun N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 60km
Minmus N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 2.5× 30km 2.5×
Duna N/A 12km 50km 140km
Ike N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 50km
Dres N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 25km
Jool N/A N/A 12× 120km 200km 4Mm
Laythe 14× 12× 11× 10× 10km 50km 200km
Vall 12× N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 90km
Tylo 12× N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 10× 250km
Bop 12× N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 25km
Pol 12× N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 22km
Eeloo 15× N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 12× 10× 60km 10×

Contracts

As of 0.24, players can access various contracts at Mission Control while playing in career mode. The rewards for accomplishing contracts vary and can include a significant amount of Science.

Acquisition Strategies

The most efficient way to gather all science on a planet or moon from orbit is to enter a polar orbit at or near 90 degrees inclination, set the periapsis to the lowest point that will not impact the surface or the atmosphere and adjust the semi-major axis to twice the sum of the radius of the orbited body and the margin between high and low orbit. This will cause the craft to be at various times both high and low over every biome on the body, eventually gathering all science that can be gathered from orbit. For example, with the Mun this means a polar orbit of 90 degrees, with a periapsis of 20 Km and an apoapsis of 620 Km. Both the periapsis and apoapsis should be exactly at the equator for best results.

Administrative Strategies

The various strategies that can be implemented at the Administration Facility while playing in career mode also have a significant effect on science income. Each strategy is based on trading one "resource" (reputation, funds, or science) for another as each is earned. Thus, at the cost of reputation or funds, the player can boost their science income. Conversely, the player can spend science to boost one of the other two resources. For example, the strategy "Outsourced R&D" yields science at the cost of funds, while "Open-Source Tech Program" will take a fraction of the player's science every time it is earned and convert it to reputation. Anywhere from 5% to 100% of the income from any of the resources can be converted into one of the others.

Science Archives

The Science Archive

A filterable list of the experiments which have been performed so far can be accessed through the “Science Archive” tab in the Research and Development window.

The entries show what data have been brought back and whether more data from repeating activities can be gathered. If the bar below an experiment is not completely full, as shown in some of the examples on the right, the experiment can be repeated to gain additional science. This is also useful to see what biomes and situations haven't been covered yet and provide the richest opportunities.

Breaking ground science experiments

Available only with the Breaking Ground Expansion installed.

The Breaking ground expansion bring two new types of science experiments: a standard ground experiment and deployable science modules. Both types are global per celestial body, depend on the body science multiplier and can only be done landed.

Robotic arm scan

There are 3 types of robotic arms which collect respectively 1/3, 2/3 and the whole experiment. The arm must be close to a surface feature in order to work. After that, the result can either be transmitted or grabed by a kerbal on EVA like any other experiment. It is better advised to use a rover with the robotic arm because proximity with a surface feature is important and cannot be corrected with a static landed ship.

2 to 3 tiers of surface features are available on each body. The first tier can also be picked up by a kerbal as stones for example.

Experiment Tier 1 Tier 2 Tier 3
Data size30 Mits45 Mits60 Mits
Base value304560
Maximum value304560
Data scale111
Transmission efficiency100%100%100%

Deployable science

Deployable science modules are a completely new type of science experiments consisting in letting modules on a foreign body and receiving science points every hour without any kerbal or probe intervention.

A deployable science module must be set with other modules

  • A deployable power source such as a deployable solar panel or RTG generator
  • A powered command unit
  • (optional) a deployable powered 10G antenna, or any probe with a relay capable antenna

All science modules must be set by a scientist for faster science points collection.

ExperimentGrand Slam Passive SeismometerGo-ob ED MonitorIonographer PD-22PD-3 Weather Analyzer
EnvironmentEverywhereEverywhereVacuumAtmospheric
Base multiplier10.281250.31250.3
Maximum value804510060

The base multiplier is used to calculate the science per hour (or ratio for the seismometer). The formula is: base multiplier · kerbal level multiplier · body surface science multiplier

The table for the kerbal multiplier value is the following:

LevelValue
Not scientist0.05
Level 00.25
Level 10.35
Level 20.45
Level 30.60
Level 40.80
Level 51.00

For example a level 3 scientist deploying an ionographer experiment on Mun gives 0.3125 · 0.60 · 4 = 0.75 science points per hour

Science - Kerbal Space Program Wiki (2024)

FAQs

How to get science in KSP science mode? ›

Science may also be obtained upon successful completion of certain contracts, or gained through the implementation of administrative strategies. Science must either be recovered or transmitted in order to be used on Kerbin to unlock additional technologies.

How much science do you need to unlock everything in KSP? ›

Unlocking the entire tree requires 18 468 Science including the hidden nodes, but 16 918 without. Before difficulty modifiers, there are 392 019.3 Science points available from experiments, and 6 055.8 from recovered vessels.

Does NASA play KSP? ›

ride along on our adventure.” He (Doug Ellison) notes that many at NASA use KSP to experiment in ways that their more unforgiving real-world environment wouldn't allow them to do.

What does Elon Musk think about Kerbal Space Program? ›

Elon Musk said his goal is to inspired people and next generation with space travelling right? KSP franchise fits that goal perfectly.

How realistic is KSP physics? ›

Physics. While the game is not a perfect simulation of reality, it has been praised for its largely accurate orbital mechanics; all objects in the game except the celestial bodies are simulated using Newtonian dynamics.

What is the hardest planet in KSP? ›

Moho is the closest planet to Kerbol, making it the first out of the current seven planets. You should not attempt this mission if you haven't done a mission returning from Gilly, Laythe, Tylo, Vall, Eeloo, or Eve, as Moho is the hardest planet to return from, except maybe Eve, Eeloo, Laythe, or a Jool Landing.

Is KSP kid friendly? ›

This game is great for kids seven and up, not because it's violent or scary it's just pretty hard to play and isn't for kids who want to learn with their screen time. In this game you learn about physics, aerodynamics orbital mechanics, money managing, geography and much more!

Is there a cheat menu in KSP? ›

Pressing ALT+F12 gave you access to the Debug Mode. In Early Access, you can toggle Unbreakable Joints, No Crash Damage, Infinite Propellant, and Infinite Electricity in the Settings Menu under General.

Do satellites do anything in KSP? ›

As for science this is right. But when you get further away from Kerbine you need communication satellites to be able to control probes when there is no Kerbal on board. This also is needed if you are on the dark side of a planet, when the planet blocks the direct communication with your space center.

Can you orbit the moon in KSP? ›

Getting into Mun Orbit

Once you have gotten into the Mun's SOI, warp to periapsis, turn towards the retrograde vector on the Navball, and activate the engine (Z key). You can cut the engine once you enter a circular orbit around the Mun. Quicksave the game and name it "Mun Orbit".

Are space stations useful in KSP? ›

Space stations can also be used for scientific measuring using the various sensors. By placing a station on an eccentric orbit, measurements at different altitudes can be taken. However, it can be more efficient to perform these tasks with smaller and more maneuverable satellites.

What planets are in KSP in real life? ›

Relation to the Solar System
Kerbol systemSolar system
MohoMercury
EveVenus
KerbinEarth
DunaMars
4 more rows
Jul 22, 2023

What is the largest planet in the Kerbal Space Program? ›

Jool. Jool is the sixth planet from Kerbol. It is the largest planet in the Kerbol system, it has 5 moons: Laythe, Vall, Tylo, Bop, and Pol.

Does KSP have exoplanets? ›

Real Exoplanets (REX) is planet pack that adds several confirmed exoplanets into KSP. As the name implies, all of these exoplanets are real, and all of the planetary systems are located exactly where they are in real life.

How to gather scientific data in Kerbal? ›

When you are ready to start gathering Science, right click on your Kerbal. Click on the green clipboard to save your findings. You can only store one Sample and Report on your Kerbal, so it's time to go back to your ship. Approach the pod, grab onto it and board.

Where is science stored in KSP? ›

The Experiment Storage Unit is used by Kerbals and unmanned probes to store science experiments. These can be stored until they are transmitted or brought back to Kerbin. In career mode, it is available with Basic Science, at level 4 of the technology tree.

Can you learn rocket science from Kerbal space program? ›

The history and science behind the game, including real-world examples of rocket technology, space missions, and space exploration. The use of the game as a tool for learning and experimentation, including how to design and test different rocket configurations and payloads.

References

Top Articles
Okegom Wiki
Endless Space 2 Lumeris Leader
Funny Roblox Id Codes 2023
Golden Abyss - Chapter 5 - Lunar_Angel
Www.paystubportal.com/7-11 Login
Joi Databas
DPhil Research - List of thesis titles
Shs Games 1V1 Lol
Evil Dead Rise Showtimes Near Massena Movieplex
Steamy Afternoon With Handsome Fernando
Which aspects are important in sales |#1 Prospection
Detroit Lions 50 50
18443168434
Newgate Honda
Zürich Stadion Letzigrund detailed interactive seating plan with seat & row numbers | Sitzplan Saalplan with Sitzplatz & Reihen Nummerierung
Grace Caroline Deepfake
978-0137606801
Nwi Arrests Lake County
Justified Official Series Trailer
London Ups Store
Committees Of Correspondence | Encyclopedia.com
Pizza Hut In Dinuba
Jinx Chapter 24: Release Date, Spoilers & Where To Read - OtakuKart
How Much You Should Be Tipping For Beauty Services - American Beauty Institute
Free Online Games on CrazyGames | Play Now!
Sizewise Stat Login
VERHUURD: Barentszstraat 12 in 'S-Gravenhage 2518 XG: Woonhuis.
Jet Ski Rental Conneaut Lake Pa
Unforeseen Drama: The Tower of Terror’s Mysterious Closure at Walt Disney World
Ups Print Store Near Me
C&T Wok Menu - Morrisville, NC Restaurant
How Taraswrld Leaks Exposed the Dark Side of TikTok Fame
University Of Michigan Paging System
Dashboard Unt
Access a Shared Resource | Computing for Arts + Sciences
Speechwire Login
Healthy Kaiserpermanente Org Sign On
Restored Republic
Lincoln Financial Field, section 110, row 4, home of Philadelphia Eagles, Temple Owls, page 1
Jambus - Definition, Beispiele, Merkmale, Wirkung
Ark Unlock All Skins Command
Craigslist Red Wing Mn
D3 Boards
Jail View Sumter
Nancy Pazelt Obituary
Birmingham City Schools Clever Login
Thotsbook Com
Funkin' on the Heights
Vci Classified Paducah
Www Pig11 Net
Ty Glass Sentenced
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Twana Towne Ret

Last Updated:

Views: 5647

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (44 voted)

Reviews: 83% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Twana Towne Ret

Birthday: 1994-03-19

Address: Apt. 990 97439 Corwin Motorway, Port Eliseoburgh, NM 99144-2618

Phone: +5958753152963

Job: National Specialist

Hobby: Kayaking, Photography, Skydiving, Embroidery, Leather crafting, Orienteering, Cooking

Introduction: My name is Twana Towne Ret, I am a famous, talented, joyous, perfect, powerful, inquisitive, lovely person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.