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Todd Phillipson’s time as superintendent of the Jefferson County Joint Vocational School will draw to a close during the next ...
One fascinating and contentious aspect of the new EA College Football 26 is the player ratings. Check out how they rate the ...
Adding notes and sketches in a reflection journal can be an enjoyable way to process information and record observations.
The exhibit, titled “Our Ocean, Close-Up,” features detailed portraits of species found in Hawaiʻi’s waters, painted by 11th ...
An exhibition at the National Gallery of Art explores the work of 16th- and 17th-century artists who captured nature’s ...
Over the past 400 years or so, a set of mostly unwritten guidelines has evolved for how science should be properly done. The ...
The Not So Secret Life of Plants” features 50 paintings from 33 artists in the Orlando Science Center’s Fusion: A STEAM Gallery.
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Boing Boing on MSNVictorian illustration depicting effects of laughing gas makes science look like a wild partyIn the age before warning labels and liability waivers, scientific experimentation often looked like something between a séance and a rave. Case in point: this glorious 1807 illustration from a ...
KEARNEY — As Jan Jones began drawing a frog for the book, “Let’s Explore Weather Lore,” the animal began to take on a life of its own.
'Sketch' trailer: Tony Hale takes on a kid's monster drawings that have come to life Get ready for a sweet creature feature.
A new book by UC Santa Cruz astrophysicist and visual artist Nia Imara debuts tomorrow that explains the universe and traces how art has blended with science throughout human history.
Found in a roughly 350-year-old manuscript by Dutch biologist Johannes Swammerdam, the scientific illustration shows the brain of a honeybee drone.
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