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Saturday 9 February 2013

THE MOST AMAZING SCIENCE IMAGES OF THE WEEK XX


New Picture 98
A Shattered-Glass Dog And Other Amazing Photos From This Week
By Shaunacy Ferro and Colin Lecher,
Popular Science, 8 February 2013.

This week's most amazing images include a shattered-glass dog, robot elephants, and a 42-wheel BMW concept designed by a 4-year-old.

1. Ice As Art

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Credit: Nick Cobbing/Greenpeace via It's Nice That

ScanLAB, a team of technicians who scan places and objects in 3-D, mapped ice in the Arctic for their newest project, Frozen Relic. Check out all of the models from the project here.

2. Every Photo Ever

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Credit: Jeff Thompson via Co.Design

Don't worry about photographing a masterpiece: this art project project will eventually make it, anyway. How? Artist Jeff Thompson's project rapidly creates images with differences only visible on the pixel level; in, uh, a lot of years, it'll eventually make an amazing image. Heck, it'll make the Mona Lisa, too. Read about it over at Co.Design.

3. Shattered-Glass Dog

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Polish artist Marta Klonowska makes life-size animals, like this not-so-cuddly dog, out of precisely broken shards of glass.

4. An Amazing Maze

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Credit: @Kya7y via Colossal

A Japanese custodian spent 7 years making this mind-blowing maze. That's long time, but, wow. Maybe it was worth it.

5. Ice-People

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Credit: Nele Azevedo via designboom

As a tribute to the victims of the Titanic, Brazilian artist Néle Azevedo made these ice-people. They were placed in Belfast, Ireland (where the Titanic was built), and they melt over time. [More at designboom]

6. A Storm From Space

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Credit: NASA via Wired

A crazy snowstorm is making its way to New England tonight, threatening to dump at least a foot of snow everywhere from New York and Maine. Like everything, it looks way cooler from space. [More at Wired and Live Science]

7. Robotic Animals

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Credit: Courtesy Noam Dover and Michal Cederbaum via designboom

Israeli director Amit Drori collaborated with the art/design team of Noam Drover and Michal Bederbaum to make robotic animals for Savanna, a theatre production shown recently at London's Barbican performing arts centre. Audience members got to interact with the automated animals - an elephant, birds, a giant moth, and more - after the show.

"In this piece man masters nature, creates it, operates and manipulates it," the artist's statement explains. "In return, the landscape and the animals that inhabit it reflect a mirror image of human thought and emotion."

See more photos at the team's website.

8. Starry Eyed

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Credit: Vik Muniz via Visual News

Brazilian-born, Brooklyn-based artist Vik Muniz uses pages torn from magazines to recreate classic paintings. See how many faces you can find hidden in the sky. [More at Visual News]

9. The Sleep Of The Beloved

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Credit: Paul Schneggenberger via Explore

German photographer Paul Schneggenberger uses a long exposure to capture all the movements of sleeping couples between midnight and 6 a.m. See more of the collection on his website.

10. Filament Mind

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The Teton County Library's public art piece Filament Mind contains more than 5 miles of fibre optic cables, each responding to a call number in the Dewey Decimal System. Whenever anyone at a Wyoming public library performs a catalogue search from a computer, the cable lights up. Suggested items in the search show up yellow, while anything the user clicks on turns blue. [More at Teton County Library]

11. BMW 4219Eli

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Credit: BMW via Jalopnik

Four-year-old Eli wanted a 42-wheel, 19-engine car. So BMW designed him one. When can we buy?

[Source: Popular Science. Edited. Some links added.]


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