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Leptospermum sp. (Myrtaceae, the myrtle family). Agnes Banks Nature Reserve, Sydney, Australia. I think flowers in Myrtaceae are so gorgeous because of the typical arrangement of their anthers (the brown parts where pollen is produced) and stigma (the green part where pollen is received). I’ve covered this family twice before: Kunzea capitata earlier in the month, and this flower which I think is either Leptospermum sp. or Baeckea sp.

Plymouth Electron Microscopy Centre

 

www.plymouth.ac.uk/emc

Modified by CombineZP

An unidentified thing I found in a bit of lung.

Closeup of the stigma of a triggerplant, Stylidium sp., SEM.

My friend Tim took several shots and photoshopped them. I'm not really graffiti.

freshwater chlorophyceae (desmid) Belgium

Art & Science course taught by Iris Meier and Amy Youngs

Trying to show evoke signs of being alive, but its lazy.

Plymouth Electron Microscopy Centre

 

www.plymouth.ac.uk/emc

Slide label info: Polycystina, Thrysocyrtis rhizodon , Richard Suter, 10 Highweek road, Tottenham.

 

Photo without eyepiece, LED lighting

Photos from lab practical with Arabidopsis flower mutants.

1000x, oil immersion

Plymouth Electron Microscopy Centre

 

www.plymouth.ac.uk/emc

Plymouth Electron Microscopy Centre

 

www.plymouth.ac.uk/emc

Microscope photography under polarized light of a broken DVD

Submitted to 'My Work' for the Cardiff University: 125 competition.

Large green cell, probably an alga, from the Weep stream green site, near Drawbridge, in the Don Edwards San Francisco Bay Wildlife Reserve. Magnification 400x.

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