Fast-motion Version {obviously}:

Fast-motion Version {obviously}:

Fast-motion version {obviously}:

Fast-motion Version {obviously}:

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More Posts from Llamaslikesciencetoo and Others

9 years ago
(image Credit To Dan Hoare On Twitter)
(image Credit To Dan Hoare On Twitter)
(image Credit To Dan Hoare On Twitter)
(image Credit To Dan Hoare On Twitter)

(image credit to Dan Hoare on twitter)

I ONLY JUST LEARNED ABOUT THE EXISTENCE OF THIS MUSHROOM????? WHICH ERUPTS FROM AN EGG BEFORE UNCURLING HELLISH ARMS, EXPOSING ITS STICKY MASS OF SPORES TO BE SPREAD BY FLIES ATTRACTED BY THE SCENT OF ROTTING FLESH???

Admittedly, I am easily won over by all organisms that attract flies with the scent of rotting flesh. But the octopus stinkhorn (Clathrus archeri) also has tentacles, a freaky egg stage, and blackish goop, so it’s my favorite now.

8 years ago
So You Think You Know Cephalopods?

So You Think You Know Cephalopods?

Pop Quiz! Georgia Aquarium Wants to Test Your Knowledge of Cephalopods

8 years ago
Come And Take A “bite” Out Of Nature & Science, Attending Explorers Society Members Event. #northmuseum

Come and take a “bite” out of nature & science, attending Explorers Society Members Event. #northmuseum #stemsisters #sharks (at North Museum of Nature & Science)

8 years ago
It’s Been Years Since I First Learned About It And I Still Can’t Get Over The Fuckin Fact That Box

It’s been years since I first learned about it and I still can’t get over the fuckin fact that box jellyfish have EYES. JELLYFISH WITH EYES. THIS JELLYFISH IS LOOKING AT YOU. THE THINGS THAT LOOK LIKE EYES ARE ITS EYES. IT HAS THEM. A JELLYFISH.

8 years ago
The Only Good News To Come Out Of 2016

the only good news to come out of 2016

8 years ago
TheStare by © wildernessprints.com

TheStare by © wildernessprints.com

Wild adult lynx in Banff National Park

9 years ago
7 Types Of Fog You Didn’t Know Had Names

7 types of fog you didn’t know had names

Fog comes in several distinct varieties that are influenced by nearby bodies of water, landscape features and other local factors. Here are some of the most impressive forms of it on the planet.

8 years ago
Mildred Dresselhaus, the Queen of Carbon, Dies at 86
Dr. Dresselhaus, who helped transform carbon into the superstar of modern materials science, was renowned for her efforts to promote the cause of women in science.

Mildred Dresselhaus, a professor emerita at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology whose research into the fundamental properties of carbon helped transform it into the superstar of modern materials science and the nanotechnology industry, died on Monday in Cambridge, Mass. She was 86.

Her death, at Mount Auburn Hospital, was confirmed by her granddaughter Leora Cooper. No cause was given.

Nicknamed the Queen of Carbon in scientific circles, Dr. Dresselhaus was renowned for her efforts to promote the cause of women in science. She was the first woman to secure a full professorship at M.I.T., in 1968, and she worked vigorously to ensure that she would not be the last.

In 1971, she and a colleague organized the first Women’s Forum at M.I.T. to explore the roles of women in science. Two years later she won a Carnegie Foundation grant to further that cause.

“I met Millie on my interview for a faculty job in 1984,” said Lorna Gibson, now a professor of materials science and engineering. “M.I.T. was quite intimidating then for a new female, but Millie made it all seem possible, even effortless. I knew it wouldn’t be, but she was such an approachable intellectual powerhouse, she made it seem that way.”

[…]

Dr. Dresselhaus used resonant magnetic fields and lasers to map out the electronic energy structure of carbon. She investigated the traits that emerge when carbon is interwoven with other materials: Stitch in some alkali metals, for example, and carbon can become a superconductor, in which an electric current meets virtually no resistance.

Dr. Dresselhaus was a pioneer in research on fullerenes, also called buckyballs: soccer-ball-shaped cages of carbon atoms that can be used as drug delivery devices, lubricants, filters and catalysts.

She conceived the idea of rolling a single-layer sheet of carbon atoms into a hollow tube, a notion eventually realized as the nanotube — a versatile structure with the strength of steel but just one ten-thousandth the width of a human hair.

She worked on carbon ribbons, semiconductors, nonplanar monolayers of molybdenum sulfide, and the scattering and vibrational effects of tiny particles introduced into ultrathin wires.

She published more than 1,700 scientific papers, co-wrote eight books and gathered a stack of accolades as fat as a nanotube is fine.

Dr. Dresselhaus was awarded the National Medal of Science, the Presidential Medal of Freedom (bestowed by President Barack Obama), the Kavli Prize in Nanoscience, the Enrico Fermi prize and dozens of honorary doctorates. She also served as president of the American Physical Society and the American Association for the Advancement of Science and worked in the Department of Energy in the Clinton administration.

Continue Reading.

9 years ago
Baby Parrots Look Like Dinosaurs (Source: Http://ift.tt/21GVxRO)

Baby parrots look like dinosaurs (Source: http://ift.tt/21GVxRO)

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llamaslikesciencetoo - This is my side blog about science
This is my side blog about science

Mainly interested in ecology, but also the entirety of science.

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