It's Okay To Be Smart

  • About
  • Twitter
  • Science Links
  • Random
  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Ask me questions
banner
staceythinx:

The winners of the ninth annual Olympus Bioscapes Digital Imaging Competition have been announced and they’re as good as you would expect given that they were selected from from nearly 2,000 entries from 62 countries. 
This year’s winner is by Ralph Grimm, a teacher from Australia who made this video of a colony of microscopic rotifers from a lily pad in his pond.

“Nature uses only the longest threads to weave her patterns, so that each small piece of her fabric reveals the organization of the entire tapestry.” - Richard Feynman
Zoom Info
staceythinx:

The winners of the ninth annual Olympus Bioscapes Digital Imaging Competition have been announced and they’re as good as you would expect given that they were selected from from nearly 2,000 entries from 62 countries. 
This year’s winner is by Ralph Grimm, a teacher from Australia who made this video of a colony of microscopic rotifers from a lily pad in his pond.

“Nature uses only the longest threads to weave her patterns, so that each small piece of her fabric reveals the organization of the entire tapestry.” - Richard Feynman
Zoom Info
staceythinx:

The winners of the ninth annual Olympus Bioscapes Digital Imaging Competition have been announced and they’re as good as you would expect given that they were selected from from nearly 2,000 entries from 62 countries. 
This year’s winner is by Ralph Grimm, a teacher from Australia who made this video of a colony of microscopic rotifers from a lily pad in his pond.

“Nature uses only the longest threads to weave her patterns, so that each small piece of her fabric reveals the organization of the entire tapestry.” - Richard Feynman
Zoom Info
staceythinx:

The winners of the ninth annual Olympus Bioscapes Digital Imaging Competition have been announced and they’re as good as you would expect given that they were selected from from nearly 2,000 entries from 62 countries. 
This year’s winner is by Ralph Grimm, a teacher from Australia who made this video of a colony of microscopic rotifers from a lily pad in his pond.

“Nature uses only the longest threads to weave her patterns, so that each small piece of her fabric reveals the organization of the entire tapestry.” - Richard Feynman
Zoom Info

staceythinx:

The winners of the ninth annual Olympus Bioscapes Digital Imaging Competition have been announced and they’re as good as you would expect given that they were selected from from nearly 2,000 entries from 62 countries. 

This year’s winner is by Ralph Grimm, a teacher from Australia who made this video of a colony of microscopic rotifers from a lily pad in his pond.

“Nature uses only the longest threads to weave her patterns, so that each small piece of her fabric reveals the organization of the entire tapestry.” - Richard Feynman

  • 4 months ago > staceythinx
  • 2119
  • Comments
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

2119 Notes/ Hide

  1. theartofsmileandnod reblogged this from thefuturesweetheart
  2. thefuturesweetheart reblogged this from jtotheizzoe
  3. bigorna80 likes this
  4. plurdledgabbleblotchits likes this
  5. echolaliating reblogged this from staceythinx
  6. im-wonderless reblogged this from staceythinx
  7. momentsoflucidity reblogged this from blamoscience
  8. katyachanxox reblogged this from icarus-suraki
  9. baby-metisse likes this
  10. dojiahol735 reblogged this from the-nuclear-chaos
  11. the-nuclear-chaos reblogged this from taraxacumwreath
  12. lightonland likes this
  13. taraxacumwreath reblogged this from ribcagekitten
  14. fibonacc1123 reblogged this from jtotheizzoe
  15. bezoario-latino reblogged this from mentalalchemy
  16. philipjcurlyfries reblogged this from staceythinx
  17. thehappiestbacksliderintheworld reblogged this from staceythinx
  18. madeforentropy reblogged this from freshphotons
  19. otonoe likes this
  20. sumomoomeme likes this
  21. sumomoomeme reblogged this from staceythinx
  22. paulagood reblogged this from staceythinx
  23. serotiny reblogged this from nybg
  24. franitz likes this
  25. ratpower likes this
  26. nessyland reblogged this from freshphotons
  27. newsunlimited reblogged this from staceythinx
  28. queyentekillyou reblogged this from jtotheizzoe
  29. suriru reblogged this from staceythinx
  30. zamajalo reblogged this from jtotheizzoe
  31. colorizeyourself reblogged this from freshphotons
  32. d34d1n51d3 reblogged this from jessgritter
  33. evildoombabies reblogged this from jessgritter
  34. justinterest reblogged this from fourthson
  35. fourthson reblogged this from jessgritter
  36. fourthson likes this
  37. vapidvision reblogged this from jessgritter
  38. jessgritter reblogged this from neohippie-
  39. icarus-suraki reblogged this from theorganization
  40. whiteboycinderella reblogged this from raybon
  41. threecheersforthisyear likes this
  42. amberlazar reblogged this from staceythinx
  43. pleasekeeplearning reblogged this from freshphotons
  44. heyneptune reblogged this from scienceing
  45. kresgekidsluggielove reblogged this from freshphotons
  46. kresgekidsluggielove likes this
  47. exogenerian reblogged this from staceythinx
  48. gno-sis reblogged this from freshphotons
  49. turnthattrackup reblogged this from staceythinx
  50. catsgrass reblogged this from freshphotons
  51. Show more notesLoading...

Recent comments

Blog comments powered by Disqus
← Previous • Next →

Portrait/Logo

About

I'm Joe Hanson, Ph.D. biologist and host/writer of PBS Digital Studios' It's Okay To Be Smart. Check out my "Episode Extras" here. There's a lot of amazing science out there. Let's go discover it together.

"Everyone's favorite Feynman of the Tumblr era" - Maria Popova

Joe's science book recommendations, from brains to biology to space to art to physics.

This is an indie blog that takes many hours a week to publish. If you'd like to support It's Okay To Be Smart, please consider even a small donation.

One of Time Magazine's 30 Must-See Tumblrs - 2012

Featured in The Best Science Writing Online - 2012

Elsewhere:
Contact me
Follow me on Twitter
(Email: itsokaytobesmart at gmail)

Let's learn something together. Click the "Share" button to send a post to Twitter, Facebook, or Google+

I'm working to change the way science is communicated and restore it to its rightful place.

Want to see more great science-y stuff? Check out my LINKS page for some of my favorites.

The Curator's Code

Twitter

loading tweets…

  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Ask me questions
  • Mobile
Effector Theme by Pixel Union