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Sorry the head is at such a funny/macabre angle here. When the cricket is first opened up, the material that you see right on top all makes up the insect's digestive system. Towards the top is the crop, which is pretty full of the experimental diet we give the crickets. Below that are lobes of the cricket's foregut, midgut, and hindgut. Crickets, like other insects, don't have a separate system for excreting pee. Instead, the stuff that would normally be excreted in pee gets excreted back into the hindgut and comes out in the cricket's frass (fancy word for insect poop).
I stood on the table they were dissecting this cat on and was so afraid that I'd fall over and go face-first into it.
The atmosphere in the new anatomy laboratory is really cold and sanitized contrary to the old one, with wood, pics, schemas and artificial artications on the wall.
the crisp wafery skeleton, laid bare. it is this that provides the Rocher with its perfect spherical form
Photoseries designed for exhibition at Knot, a gallery and retail in Bergen.
See the whole project at Behance: www.behance.net/gallery/Disseksjon-Veikadaver/672318
And se the timelaps at Vimeo: vimeo.com/14475664
Okay here we see the kidneys on the right. The green worm looking thing is the colon, and above it is the large intestine.
Photoseries designed for exhibition at Knot, a gallery and retail in Bergen.
See the whole project at Behance: www.behance.net/gallery/Disseksjon-Veikadaver/672318
And se the timelaps at Vimeo: vimeo.com/14475664
Taking apart an electric toothbrush for design analysis in MCHE201: Introduction to Engineering Design.
For more info, see: www.ucs.louisiana.edu/~jev9637/MCHE201.html