Explore IMHILL's 702 photos on Flickr!
The bones of creatures as varied as elephants, hummingbirds and humans are eloquent totems, raising questions about life and death.
Steve Miller uses x-rays, MRI scans and satellite imagery to reveal an eerie, unseen side of nature. What happened when he travelled to the Amazon to x-ray its plants, piranhas, snakes and sloths?
Australian mammals are an anatomically idiosyncratic bunch. Just look at a platypus bill. Beyond the curious bill though — how much do you know about monotremes? Ann Jones meets the author of a new book featuring remarkable x-rays of unique Australian mammals.
Explore biblioklept's 798 photos on Flickr!
Computed tomography (CT) scans of two ancient baby mammoths, Khroma and Lyuba, reveal skeletal differences.
Me ↑ *-* Sou uma estudante de biologia, apaixonada pela ciência, fã e protetora dos cachorros e todo ser vivente! Ah, a natureza... nós não somos nadica sem ela! Fomos feitos para admira-la e RESPEITA-LA acima de tudo!
Using X-rays is part of a whole host of strategies for animal care -- made more complicated by the fact that there are lots of animals, and none of them can tell vets what might be wrong.
Turtle shell part of its bony protective structure.
In 1895, German physics professor Wilhelm Röntgen produced and discovered X-rays while experimenting with Lenard tubes and Crookes tubes and began studying them. In his initial report, the first paper written on X-rays, Röntgen referred to the radiation as "X", to indicate that it was an unknown type of radiation.
This is the bizarre ocean sunfish, the world’s biggest bony fish. It can grow to some 5,000 pounds, 60 million times the size the egg it starts out as.
Here's a look at the plastinated animals from the Animals Inside Out exhibition, Gunther von Hagens latest "body worlds" endeavor.
Working in concert with publisher Xavier Barral and writer/scientist Dr. Jean-Baptiste de Panafieu, photographer Patrick Gries has put together a
Interesting pieces of odd history mixed with a bit of wonder from our world.
Grrrrrrr....
Steve Miller uses x-rays, MRI scans and satellite imagery to reveal an eerie, unseen side of nature. What happened when he travelled to the Amazon to x-ray its plants, piranhas, snakes and sloths?