On January 7, 1839, an installation artist and chemist named Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre announced to the French Academy of Sciences in Paris that he had perfected a photographic imaging technology ...
What: The Science Behind Nature Photography, with Rick Spitzer. When: 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 16. Where: Walking Mountains Science Center, 318 Walking Mountains ...
Ever wondered what a stag beetle looks like under a very powerful magnifying glass? Or how bubbles are formulated and structured? Maybe you are confused by the peculiar ways jellyfish move underwater?
From a charred elephant carcass to proteins expressed by prostate cancer cells, the top entries in this year’s New Scientist Eureka Prize for Science Photography competition encompass the very big and ...
Science fiction author Arthur C. Clarke once wrote, “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” Magic, art or science? Film photography blurs the lines between these ...
Spring quarter saw the introduction of photography to the university's Art-Science Fusion Program, and the students' work (from Science and Society 40, with land, air and water resources professor ...
Photographs accompanying most scientific papers might politely be called “functional”. But this collection of images from Imperial College London’s research photography competition proves that ...
Palaeobotanist Kseniia Ashastina took this picture of her supervisor, Frank Kienast, collecting samples of ancient plants from a permafrost exposure in northeast Siberia, in June 2014. Ashastina, who ...
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