proktos agressive mimicry

hypna:

A Wave Of Matter In A Sea Of Ball Bearings

Wave Of Matter consists of a bare, square platform that holds thousands of ball bearings and periodically tilts, causing a waves of ball bearings to ripple across the surface, mimicking the sound of the ocean.

Something to meditate to…

expose-the-light:

Pregnant Pygmy Seahorse

expose-the-light:

The Fine Art of Dogs

alchymista:

These are Atlantic wolffish, residing off of rocky coasts in depths up to 1,600 feet below the ocean’s surface. They can reach up to five feet long, with crooked teeth highly suited for crushing their prey of mollusks, shellfish, and sea urchins. It’s a face only a mother could love.

(via)

alchymista:

These are Atlantic wolffish, residing off of rocky coasts in depths up to 1,600 feet below the ocean’s surface. They can reach up to five feet long, with crooked teeth highly suited for crushing their prey of mollusks, shellfish, and sea urchins. It’s a face only a mother could love.

(via)

stonyslov:

Make it Last by Allan Sanders on Flickr.
myampgoesto11:

GLOW REVEALS BEGINNINGS OF CANCER






GREEN FLUORESCENT DYE reveals the presence of cells deep within the brain of a mutant mouse that represent the beginning of a brain cancer called medulloblastoma. This image comes from the laboratory of Robert Wechsler-Reya, an Assistant Professor of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology at Duke University Medical Center, who studies cell growth and tumor formation in the nervous system. The dye was used to label cells containing an enzyme that is abundant in pre-cancerous cells. For more information visit the Wechsler-Reya lab’s photo gallery.

myampgoesto11:

GLOW REVEALS BEGINNINGS OF CANCER

GREEN FLUORESCENT DYE reveals the presence of cells deep within the brain of a mutant mouse that represent the beginning of a brain cancer called medulloblastoma. This image comes from the laboratory of Robert Wechsler-Reya, an Assistant Professor of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology at Duke University Medical Center, who studies cell growth and tumor formation in the nervous system. The dye was used to label cells containing an enzyme that is abundant in pre-cancerous cells. For more information visit the Wechsler-Reya lab’s photo gallery.