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Technoid is a military robot. They can shoot and hover. All of them is using Destabilization Swords that can destroy any Toa, Matoran etc. system and make 'em unable to reform at Red Star. This version of Technoid is enriched by The Sword of Power. Sword gained this specific Technoid large mechanical muscles and gifted it with consciousness.

8th Session of the Intergovernmental Technical Working Group on Animal Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture

 

www-data.fao.org/ag/againfo/programmes/en/genetics/angrve...

 

©FAO/Grégoire Leroy

  

this montage is a genetic portrait mixing my face and my bro's face

 

im on the half-left (blue) of photo and my brother is the half-right (brown)

:)

 

It's crazy

8th Session of the Intergovernmental Technical Working Group on Animal Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture

 

www-data.fao.org/ag/againfo/programmes/en/genetics/angrve...

 

©FAO/Grégoire Leroy

  

My friend Rodrigo Facello is a genetic engineer, and is working on a research about organic honey production in a wild environment, with the institution CRYCIT, in the desert areas of center east of Mendoza province, Argentina.

This ATC was made for the DNA my ATC swap on swapbot. Collaged from images from an old textbook and the machine is one of jerseybarb85s in the collage images group.

Issued free in Amsterdam in the year 2000, every month a new design by DEPT.

BEZET#20 (August 2000)

Wanaka, NZ. Found on lakeshore near Damper Bay.

 

Although currently listed as subspecies, I regard R. raniformis and R. major to be distinct species because in Australia they maintain a very deep (7% ND4 mDNA) genetic divergence despite extensive historical distribution contact (with apparent hybrids only associated with human meddling), combined with differences in call and morphology, demonstrating independent evolutionary trajectories. In NZ where they were artificially brought together, they have remained recognizably different despite 140 or so years of opportunity to hybridize.

 

While R. major is common among farm ponds in the Lake Wanaka area, this individual was found in the lake itself and exhibits markedly different traits, including brilliant yellow/white spots on the thighs, a brown vertebral stripe and a consistently brief call, which suggest that it is instead R. raniformis. It was collected and I currently keep it with my pet R. aurea.

Microworld Arcadia was a group art show organised by Genetic Moo at the Arcadecardiff gallery in the Queens Arcade shopping mall for two weeks in May 2013. The show consisted of interactive and generative artworks by different artists. The art works responded to the audience, the gallery and importantly to each other, so the space was constantly changing in pixels, sound, colour and motion. Each day different works were brought together in different combinations.

 

On the first day you can see The Virus & Comb Jellies by Genetic Moo, Chromatic Play sculptures by Tine Bech and Primordial sound and generative visuals by Jockel Liess.

 

Microworld Arcadia was a big success breaking attendance records for the gallery and we plan to take the show on tour in the future, working with different sets of local artists each time to create interactive digital Microworlds around the UK and beyond.

 

For more information about the show see www.geneticmoo.com

   

Some think that this might help fight the world hunger, despite the health and environmental risks. Others say that there is already enough food being produced within common methods of farming and that the real problem is poverty, meaning the poor and hungry cannot buy it, and inequality of countries or displacement of rations.

Taken a long time ago (1988) for the Queen's visit to Lichfield Cathedral to distribute the Maundy Money.

 

I had to wait for the arrival of digital to manipulate the picture as I wanted. I tried using traditional methods but it never got to looking any thing like I wanted. I think this does look very similar to how I wanted it to look in the first place. Taken with an Olympus OM2 on Ilford FP4 (original pic)

Prof Sir Alec Jeffreys, speaking to the students at the Golden Jubilee Lecture of Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi on 27 October 2010. Follow us on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ukinindia

This is a little dwarf rat that popped up in one of my litters. The larger rat is his litter mate. You can see the striking size difference between the two!

Seed orchard. Dorena Genetic Resource Center, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Photo by: Unknown

Date: 1968

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection.

Source: Division of Timber Management, Insect and Disease Control Branch print collection; Regional Office, Portland, Oregon.

 

For more about the Dorena Genetic Resource Center, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Region, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

Created with Visions of Chaos

softology.pro/voc.htm

Created with Visions of Chaos

softology.pro/voc.htm

Dr. Andy Pereira describes rice genetic research during the high school tour. (UA System Division of Agriculture photo by Fred Miller)

Illustration for article on DNA design.

This is a little dwarf rat that popped up in one of my litters. The larger rat is his litter mate. You can see the striking size difference between the two!

Microworld Arcadia was a group art show organised by Genetic Moo at the Arcadecardiff gallery in the Queens Arcade shopping mall for two weeks in May 2013. The show consisted of interactive and generative artworks by different artists. The art works responded to the audience, the gallery and importantly to each other, so the space was constantly changing in pixels, sound, colour and motion. Each day different works were brought together in different combinations.

 

On the first day you can see us setting up The Virus and Comb jellies which face each other across the room, and also It's Alive! in the corner.

 

Microworld Arcadia was a big success breaking attendance records for the gallery and we plan to take the show on tour in the future, working with different sets of local artists each time to create interactive digital Microworlds around the UK and beyond.

 

For more information about the show see www.geneticmoo.com

 

Scientist having genetic experiment with apple.

One of the current dogs available for adoption from Keshet, is Ruxin. Ruxin is a Eurasier.

 

We find that Ruxin displays the playful/people friendly aspect of the Samoyed's average behaviour and the protective instincts of the Chow Chow. His colouring and purple tongue definitely showcase the Chow in his genetic makeup, but there is no mistaking he takes after the Keeshund in the proportions of his face and ears.

 

For more information on Ruxin go to: www.keshetkennels.com/rescue/for-adoption/ruxin/

Another montage of images generated during one experiment of my Genetic Art project for a genetic algorithms course I took. Be sure to click All Sizes to see the mega-huge version.

 

This version shows all the reference Flickr images, followed to their right by their ten closest matches in the evolutionary populations.

 

See http://oranchak.com/photosome/results for lots more info.

Seed orchard. Dorena Genetic Resource Center, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Photo by: Unknown

Date: 1968

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection.

Source: Division of Timber Management, Insect and Disease Control Branch print collection; Regional Office, Portland, Oregon.

 

For more about the Dorena Genetic Resource Center, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Region, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

vikings' disease..duputrens' contracture..still works!

Science & Art Center, Valencia, Spain

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