尼康微观世界摄影大赛作品 精彩纷呈!# Animals - 动物园
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今年是第38届,优胜者将在一周后公布,建议看原帖大图,链接在下面。
What you looking at? This picture by Nikola Rahme from Budapest, Hungary,
shows a parasitic wasp peering into the lens of a microsope.
See no evil, speak no evil, detect the precise
location of evil using ultrasonic echoes: This image by University of
Cambridge researcher Dorit Hockman shows embryos of the black mastiff bat.
Spiky: Harold Taylor of Kensworth, Dunstable, entered this picture of a
house spider's face.
Baby love: This picture by Geir Drange shows an ant carrying its larva.
Weeeeee! This fruit fly larvae, pictured by Dr Andrew Woolley, looks like he
's jumping for joy.
Bad hair day: Someone needs to plug in the straighteners for this mosquito,
entered by Dr David Maitland.
Shiny eyes: This picture by Ralph Grimm shows a lacewing head.
Playtime: Newborn lynx spiders scurry in this picture submitted by Walter
Piorkowski.
Now you listen here... One ant appears to be scolding another in this entry
by Geir Drange.
Young, but not quite cute: Dr Ward Strong entered this picture of a Botfly
larva.
Unpleasant: This image by Gilles San Martin shows a female parasitic mite
that attacks honey bees.
Microscopic world: This picture by Charles Krebs shows Haematococcus (algae)
, Euplotes (protozoa), and Cyclidium (ciliate).
Feeling blue: Alain Bocquillon submitted this, which is also a parasitic
mite that attacks honey bees.
Irritating: Charles Krebs sent in this picture of a stinging nettle trichome
on a leaf vein.
Ancient abstract art: Douglas Moore's entry shows fossilised stromatolite (
accumulations of cyanobacteria on a substrate).
Furry: This image entered by José R. Almodovar Rivera shows a pistil of the
flower of Adenium obesum.
Not a strawberry: The and first segments of Cucujus cinnaberinus (Cinnabar
flat beetle) - and an unidentified beast - as pictured by Nikola Rahme.
Intricate: The blood-brain barrier of a zebra fish embryo was entered by Dr
Jennifer Peters.
Inorganic: Honorio Cûcera's entry shows the mineral cacoxenite.
Marine life: This picture by Gerd A. Guenther shows a sea gooseberry larva.
Not as friendly as he looks: Ralph Grimm's competition entry shows the head
of a mosquito.
Essential ingredient: This picture by Dr Somayeh Naghiloo shows garlic.
Nose job? This picture by Chao Zhang from Beijing, China, shows a weevil's
head and snout.
These incredible pictures reveal the hidden beauty of the world around us
that is too minuscule for the human eye to discern. The images are all
entries into the Small World photomicrography competition run by Nikon to
find the most striking microscopic images taken by scientists and artists
alike. Now in its 38th year, the contest invites entrants from all those
involved in photography through conventional light microscope.
Small World has, over the decades, become a leading showcase for
photomicrographers from a wide array of disciplines. These images are
entrants into the 2012 competition, for which winners will be announced next
week. Nikon says: 'A photomicrograph is a technical document that can be of
great significance to science or industry. But a good photomicrograph is
also an image whose structure, colour, composition, and content is an object
of beauty, open to several levels of comprehension and appreciation. The
Nikon Small World Competition is open to anyone with an interest in
photography through the microscope. Truly international in scope, entries
have been received from the United States, Canada, Europe, Australia, Latin
America, Asia, and Africa. Winners have included both professionals and
hobbyists.
Link:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2219565/Nikon-re
What you looking at? This picture by Nikola Rahme from Budapest, Hungary,
shows a parasitic wasp peering into the lens of a microsope.
See no evil, speak no evil, detect the precise
location of evil using ultrasonic echoes: This image by University of
Cambridge researcher Dorit Hockman shows embryos of the black mastiff bat.
Spiky: Harold Taylor of Kensworth, Dunstable, entered this picture of a
house spider's face.
Baby love: This picture by Geir Drange shows an ant carrying its larva.
Weeeeee! This fruit fly larvae, pictured by Dr Andrew Woolley, looks like he
's jumping for joy.
Bad hair day: Someone needs to plug in the straighteners for this mosquito,
entered by Dr David Maitland.
Shiny eyes: This picture by Ralph Grimm shows a lacewing head.
Playtime: Newborn lynx spiders scurry in this picture submitted by Walter
Piorkowski.
Now you listen here... One ant appears to be scolding another in this entry
by Geir Drange.
Young, but not quite cute: Dr Ward Strong entered this picture of a Botfly
larva.
Unpleasant: This image by Gilles San Martin shows a female parasitic mite
that attacks honey bees.
Microscopic world: This picture by Charles Krebs shows Haematococcus (algae)
, Euplotes (protozoa), and Cyclidium (ciliate).
Feeling blue: Alain Bocquillon submitted this, which is also a parasitic
mite that attacks honey bees.
Irritating: Charles Krebs sent in this picture of a stinging nettle trichome
on a leaf vein.
Ancient abstract art: Douglas Moore's entry shows fossilised stromatolite (
accumulations of cyanobacteria on a substrate).
Furry: This image entered by José R. Almodovar Rivera shows a pistil of the
flower of Adenium obesum.
Not a strawberry: The and first segments of Cucujus cinnaberinus (Cinnabar
flat beetle) - and an unidentified beast - as pictured by Nikola Rahme.
Intricate: The blood-brain barrier of a zebra fish embryo was entered by Dr
Jennifer Peters.
Inorganic: Honorio Cûcera's entry shows the mineral cacoxenite.
Marine life: This picture by Gerd A. Guenther shows a sea gooseberry larva.
Not as friendly as he looks: Ralph Grimm's competition entry shows the head
of a mosquito.
Essential ingredient: This picture by Dr Somayeh Naghiloo shows garlic.
Nose job? This picture by Chao Zhang from Beijing, China, shows a weevil's
head and snout.
These incredible pictures reveal the hidden beauty of the world around us
that is too minuscule for the human eye to discern. The images are all
entries into the Small World photomicrography competition run by Nikon to
find the most striking microscopic images taken by scientists and artists
alike. Now in its 38th year, the contest invites entrants from all those
involved in photography through conventional light microscope.
Small World has, over the decades, become a leading showcase for
photomicrographers from a wide array of disciplines. These images are
entrants into the 2012 competition, for which winners will be announced next
week. Nikon says: 'A photomicrograph is a technical document that can be of
great significance to science or industry. But a good photomicrograph is
also an image whose structure, colour, composition, and content is an object
of beauty, open to several levels of comprehension and appreciation. The
Nikon Small World Competition is open to anyone with an interest in
photography through the microscope. Truly international in scope, entries
have been received from the United States, Canada, Europe, Australia, Latin
America, Asia, and Africa. Winners have included both professionals and
hobbyists.
Link:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2219565/Nikon-re