Today I received the best compliment - A young student who had lost her eyesight due to a brain tumour thanked me for my verbal descriptions of the visual aspects of my props and slides. A reminder to consider who is in your audience

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Last one for today. Gorgeous Bengal tiger study (panthera tigris tigris) from years back 🙈

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Day 5 of is a cartoon teaser by a new artist on our team, Jacinta (). Leonardo da Vinci, famously known as a painter, produced remarkable drawings of human anatomy and the brain! New cartoon posted next week

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Another one for
This cool dude is a giant also called ant bears (Myrmecophaga tridactyla). They live in South/Central America and I'm sure you can guess what they eat 😎

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The tweet storm is back! I am a and artist, and passionate about Sometimes I work developing pieces explaining complex concepts like this collaboration for on one of my favorite subjects,

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Day 5 of features Jane Cooke Wright, cancer researcher and contributor to chemotherapy and tissue culture techniques.

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Clue number 3. Can you figure out the diagnoses or symptom that connects them? If you'd like to support me illustrating medicine, consider a coffee membership to the Scrub Club on Patreon (https://t.co/oo9crhr7qx).

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Day 3. Here are a few complex marine science illustrations I’ve made over the past several years for Oceanographer Francisco Chavez at MBARI. Illustrations by Kelly Lance © MBARI.

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I love working with fellow scientists—from learning about their research, composing a story, to visualizing it through different media—such a thrilling process! Here are some of my early collab with , & Dr. Julie-Anne Gandier

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Joining the and Showcasing some of my insect paleoart! 🦟🦗🐜
Keep your eyes peeled for new artwork later today! 👀

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Day 3 of celebrates Virginia Apgar, an obstetrician who created the Apgar test, a way to score a newborn after birth, id-ing potential problems after birth.

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Gooseneck barnacles: these intertidal crustaceans are stationary filter feeders that can be found throughout the PNW

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Clue number 2. Can you figure out the diagnosis or symptom that connects them? If you'd like to support me illustrating medicine, consider a coffee membership to the Scrub Club on Patreon (https://t.co/WxdCwbFgWb).

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Day 1 We open with Hypatia of Alexandria, philosopher, astronomer, mathematician, teacher - murdered by a Christian mob due to a political feud.

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You can learn more about (and protists) in our newest "Protists and Fungi" video! ▶️ https://t.co/njnu0T8kid

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Doing with youth? Check out BrainPOP for terrific educational animations for K-12 students on a wide array of topics - from to https://t.co/D09iZ8ng52

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As season to honor is coming, I'm resurrecting my project featuring Working on a list of historic & modern to draw. Send your recs, retweet/follow if you love

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A funky-looking Chambered Nautilus is making an appearance for this week's

What this guy lacks in memory, he more than makes up for with 90 tentacles and a shell that inspires many mathematical debates.

Nautilus pompilius

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It may be slow, but at least it's more predictable than wind travel.

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For I am opening a thread about Early Triassic tetrapod faunal assemblages. After the Permian extinction, terrestrial faunal assemblages were depauperate and most were very similar in composition. Temnospondyls were quick to diversify

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