Histoire naturelle

Posted: 22 août 2012 à 16 h 35 , by Tim Dickinson
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Submitted by David Baxter

As student staff in the ROM Botany Section, my summer work has mostly involved sitting in a basement office updating the plant specimen database, and occasionally working with the herbarium specimens themselves. This last week, however, I’ve been in Montana and Washington searching for Crataegus (hawthorn) trees. Quite a change of pace!

Posted: 20 août 2012 à 9 h 43 , by admin
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Matthew Vavrek in his tent during a research expedition.

Posted: 16 août 2012 à 9 h 24 , by admin
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David Evans poses with a dino fossils in an outdoor storage space.

Posted: 14 août 2012 à 8 h 32 , by David Evans
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Tents in a grassy field with a rainbow across a grey sky.

Fig. 1. Camp after a rainstorm.

Posted: 20 Juillet 2012 à 15 h 59 , by admin
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By Brennan Caverhill, Biodiversity Intern

Hello! Joshua See here, Environmental Visual Communication student at the ROM. I am writing from the wild heart of Guyana, where I am documenting the research and education efforts of Burton Lim, Assistant Curator of Mammals.

Posted: 25 Juin 2012 à 14 h 53 , by admin
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submitted by the ROM Bioblitz Team

Posted: 12 Juin 2012 à 13 h 57 , by Dave Ireland
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Submitted by Brennan Caverhill, Biodiversity Intern

Rouge BioBlitz, June 15 - 16, 2012

Posted: 11 Juin 2012 à 15 h 52 , by Antonia Guidotti
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Sometimes, there are really extraordinary stories that are uncovered in our day to day studies; this particular one was submitted by Dr. Henry Frania, an Entomology research associate at the ROM.

Posted: 5 Juin 2012 à 8 h 55 , by Ian Nicklin
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By Brendt C. Hyde and Ian Nicklin

A specimen featuring a textured and glassy rock surface.

Figure 1: Meteorite showing ‘thumbprint’ features referred to as regmaglypts.

Posted: 17 Mai 2012 à 23 h 34 , by Kiron Mukherjee
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I used to walk through the halls of my high school (yes, high school – I don’t know what was wrong with me either) making animal noises. Not the normal ones like “moo” and “oink”, but the more obscure ones (I guess it’s the hipster in me). For instance, my impression of the Komodo dragon had a sort of snake and bark sound, and the giraffe, since I had no idea what sound they make (do you?) was just, “giraffe, giraffe!”. I pretty much made the sounds up as I went along.

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