Teachers: Earn Graduate Credit And Advance Your Career In Six Weeks With Our Flexible Online Courses!

View of the Blue Whale from the floor of the Hall of Ocean Life. A 94-foot-long fiberglass model of a female blue whale is suspended from the ceiling.

Teachers: Earn graduate credit and advance your career in six weeks with our flexible online courses! Connect with the Museum’s scientists, labs, exhibitions, and specimens. You can choose from a variety of courses ranging from Marine Biology and the Solar System to Climate Change and Virology. The courses are asynchronous, providing participants with the flexibility to complete weekly activities at their own pace—and can be taken anywhere at any time! Subject to school/district approval, courses may be used toward professional development, salary advancement, and recertification. Sign up for our summer session today—classes start July 8!

Photo: A. Keding / © AMNH

More Posts from Invincibleworld and Others

10 months ago
View of the Blue Whale from the floor of the Hall of Ocean Life. A 94-foot-long fiberglass model of a female blue whale is suspended from the ceiling.

Teachers: Earn graduate credit and advance your career in six weeks with our flexible online courses! Connect with the Museum’s scientists, labs, exhibitions, and specimens. You can choose from a variety of courses ranging from Marine Biology and the Solar System to Climate Change and Virology. The courses are asynchronous, providing participants with the flexibility to complete weekly activities at their own pace—and can be taken anywhere at any time! Subject to school/district approval, courses may be used toward professional development, salary advancement, and recertification. Sign up for our summer session today—classes start July 8!

Photo: A. Keding / © AMNH

4 months ago

I am the owner

Of this damage, the weapon

Fired to make the wound

Eyes full of apologies

Belie my gunpowder smile

3 months ago
January Was Challenging And Hectic, But February Has Been Pleasant So Far.
January Was Challenging And Hectic, But February Has Been Pleasant So Far.
January Was Challenging And Hectic, But February Has Been Pleasant So Far.
January Was Challenging And Hectic, But February Has Been Pleasant So Far.

January was challenging and hectic, but February has been pleasant so far.

10 months ago

'fairies dont exist' WRONG❗❗cyerce elegans

'fairies Dont Exist' WRONG❗❗cyerce Elegans
'fairies Dont Exist' WRONG❗❗cyerce Elegans
'fairies Dont Exist' WRONG❗❗cyerce Elegans
'fairies Dont Exist' WRONG❗❗cyerce Elegans
10 months ago

regular lobsters start out as just little lobsters but spiny lobsters start out as these beautiful weird larvae that also evolved to ride on top of jellyfish. This jellyfish is too small though!!!

10 months ago
A photo of a shortfin mako shark. The animal is sleek, with a pointed dorsal fin, black eyes, and jaws full of sharp teeth

The Summer Games are here, so let’s meet the gold medal champion for fastest shark in the sea: the shortfin mako shark (Isurus oxyrinchus)! This agile predator fish is one of the world’s fastest swimmers, able to reach a top speed of over 40 mph (64.3 kmh). For perspective, the current 100m freestyle world record holder swam at an overall speed of 4.7 mph (2.9 km/h). A model of this shark can be found in the Museum's Hall of Biodiversity.

Want to learn more? Become a Museum Member today! Plus, use promo code GAMES24 and we’ll include a FREE, limited-edition Summer Games tote bag.

Photo:  Alison Kock, CC BY-NC 4.0, iNaturalist

5 months ago
The Birth Of Brain Cells

The Birth of Brain Cells

This might look like a distant web of galaxies captured by a powerful telescope, but it’s actually a microscopic image of a newborn nerve cell. The human brain contains more cells than there are stars in our galaxy, and the most important cells are neurons, which are nerve cells responsible for transmitting and processing electro-chemical signals at up to 320 km/h. This chemical signalling occurs through synapses—specialised connections with other cells, like wires in a computer. Each cell can receive input from thousands of others, so a typical neuron can have up to ten thousand synapses—i.e., can communicate with up to ten thousand other neurons, muscle cells, and glands. Estimates suggest that adult humans have approximately 100 billion neurons in their brain, but unlike most cells, neurons don’t undergo cell division, so if they’re damaged they don’t grow back—except, apparently, in the hippocampus (associated with memory) and the olfactory bulb (associated with sense of smell). The process by which this occurs is unclear, and this image was taken during a project to determine how neurons are born—it actually depicts newborn nerve cells in an adult mouse’s brain.

(Image Credit: Dana Bradford)

5 months ago
The Many Faces Of Reactive Plasma Cells - All Found Within The Same Chronic Skin Infection In A Dog!
The Many Faces Of Reactive Plasma Cells - All Found Within The Same Chronic Skin Infection In A Dog!
The Many Faces Of Reactive Plasma Cells - All Found Within The Same Chronic Skin Infection In A Dog!
The Many Faces Of Reactive Plasma Cells - All Found Within The Same Chronic Skin Infection In A Dog!
The Many Faces Of Reactive Plasma Cells - All Found Within The Same Chronic Skin Infection In A Dog!
The Many Faces Of Reactive Plasma Cells - All Found Within The Same Chronic Skin Infection In A Dog!
The Many Faces Of Reactive Plasma Cells - All Found Within The Same Chronic Skin Infection In A Dog!

The many faces of reactive plasma cells - all found within the same chronic skin infection in a dog!

Plasma cells are activated B lymphocytes and their purpose is to secrete immunoglobulin. When they become reactive, or stimulated, they can be binucleated, multinucleated, and have a variety of morphological changes occur including the formation of Russell bodies. Russell bodies are round to globular intracellular aggregates of immunoglobulin; their formation is due to an imbalance between the rates of synthesis, folding, secretion, and degradation of immunoglobulins.

While most Russell bodies are rounded, one (of many) phenotype of Russell bodies can present as crystalline bodies. Immunoglobulin crystals are very uncommon to see in plasma cell proliferations, and very few reports have been authored on them in veterinary medicine. I feel very lucky to have found three different types of crystalline bodies as you can hopefully appreciate in the above pictures!

1 month ago
Dailyart

dailyart

10 months ago

the deep sea creatures when a scientist shows up with a flashlight outta no where

The Deep Sea Creatures When A Scientist Shows Up With A Flashlight Outta No Where
  • djgvr69c
    djgvr69c liked this · 3 months ago
  • autonomy1
    autonomy1 liked this · 4 months ago
  • ziobbo
    ziobbo liked this · 6 months ago
  • drmh2040
    drmh2040 liked this · 6 months ago
  • schattenwolf69
    schattenwolf69 liked this · 6 months ago
  • vital-deloin
    vital-deloin liked this · 6 months ago
  • the-eternal-moonshine
    the-eternal-moonshine liked this · 6 months ago
  • alex--max
    alex--max liked this · 6 months ago
  • dutchs-blog
    dutchs-blog liked this · 6 months ago
  • rodolfo9999
    rodolfo9999 liked this · 6 months ago
  • paddy0121
    paddy0121 liked this · 7 months ago
  • ninomeira
    ninomeira liked this · 7 months ago
  • invincibleworld
    invincibleworld reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • invincibleworld
    invincibleworld reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • invincibleworld
    invincibleworld liked this · 10 months ago
  • nova-wave68
    nova-wave68 liked this · 10 months ago
  • lazy-humus
    lazy-humus liked this · 10 months ago
  • moody-room
    moody-room liked this · 10 months ago
  • tasteslikedisaster
    tasteslikedisaster reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • tasteslikedisaster
    tasteslikedisaster liked this · 10 months ago
  • thegay17
    thegay17 liked this · 10 months ago
  • angybk7
    angybk7 liked this · 10 months ago
  • romanbaraban-blog1
    romanbaraban-blog1 liked this · 11 months ago
  • terratat
    terratat liked this · 11 months ago
  • kiaroryn7777
    kiaroryn7777 liked this · 11 months ago
  • amgrycoconut
    amgrycoconut liked this · 11 months ago
  • alissonafreitas
    alissonafreitas liked this · 11 months ago
  • onthishamsterwheel
    onthishamsterwheel liked this · 11 months ago
  • herosauras
    herosauras liked this · 11 months ago
  • goblinious
    goblinious liked this · 11 months ago
  • aroace-garlic-bread-and-cake
    aroace-garlic-bread-and-cake liked this · 11 months ago
  • blogfan23
    blogfan23 reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • blogfan23
    blogfan23 liked this · 11 months ago
  • fondlymorning
    fondlymorning liked this · 11 months ago
  • decaffeinatedobjectdreamland
    decaffeinatedobjectdreamland liked this · 11 months ago
  • selveinterrotte
    selveinterrotte liked this · 11 months ago
  • shirebluebell
    shirebluebell liked this · 11 months ago
  • kindlycleverlysmooth
    kindlycleverlysmooth liked this · 11 months ago
  • vie-belle-vie
    vie-belle-vie liked this · 11 months ago
  • freeusebiker
    freeusebiker liked this · 11 months ago
  • bigpersonpickledonkey
    bigpersonpickledonkey liked this · 11 months ago
  • daisukesato
    daisukesato liked this · 11 months ago
  • karontte
    karontte liked this · 11 months ago
  • hangry-eyes
    hangry-eyes liked this · 11 months ago
invincibleworld - Invincible World
Invincible World

Science nerd 🧪 | History buff 📜 | Dog & cat person 🐾always curious!

68 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags