Showing posts tagged infographic.
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IntelligentDesign/RandomDrift

curriculum vitae   Oxalis research   teaching   cars   photography   Brasil 2011   

Andy Gardner; andyggardner@gmail.com, aggardner@wisc.edu; husband / grad student / teacher / photoshopaholic / espresso-obsessive / car nut / etc.
sunfoundation:

Volcanes mas altos: México y el mundo

sunfoundation:

Volcanes mas altos: México y el mundo

— 1 month ago with 27 notes
#mexico  #volcano  #infographic  #map 
scipsy:

“Geological Investigation of the Alluvial Valley of the Lower Mississippi River” by Harold Fisk, 1944. (via The Rocks Know)

scipsy:

“Geological Investigation of the Alluvial Valley of the Lower Mississippi River” by Harold Fisk, 1944. (via The Rocks Know)

— 2 months ago with 295 notes
#river  #map  #history  #design  #infographic  #mississippi 
plantedcity:

Infographic: ‘Our Dwindling Food Variety’
From National Geographic:

As we’ve come to depend on a handful of commercial varieties of fruits and vegetables, thousands of heirloom varieties have disappeared. It’s hard to know exactly how many have been lost over the past century, but a study conducted in 1983 by the Rural Advancement Foundation International gave a clue to the scope of the problem. It compared USDA listings of seed varieties sold by commercial U.S. seed houses in 1903 with those in the U.S. National Seed Storage Laboratory in 1983. The survey, which included 66 crops, found that about 93 percent of the varieties had gone extinct. More up-to-date studies are needed.

The infographic accompanies the feature article ‘Food Ark’, which looks at efforts to protect and enhance the global food supply. Also included with the article are sections on some amazing ‘Seeds Worth Saving’ and how to ‘Grow Your Own Heirlooms’.

plantedcity:

Infographic: ‘Our Dwindling Food Variety’

From National Geographic:

As we’ve come to depend on a handful of commercial varieties of fruits and vegetables, thousands of heirloom varieties have disappeared. It’s hard to know exactly how many have been lost over the past century, but a study conducted in 1983 by the Rural Advancement Foundation International gave a clue to the scope of the problem. It compared USDA listings of seed varieties sold by commercial U.S. seed houses in 1903 with those in the U.S. National Seed Storage Laboratory in 1983. The survey, which included 66 crops, found that about 93 percent of the varieties had gone extinct. More up-to-date studies are needed.

The infographic accompanies the feature article ‘Food Ark’, which looks at efforts to protect and enhance the global food supply. Also included with the article are sections on some amazing ‘Seeds Worth Saving’ and how to ‘Grow Your Own Heirlooms’.

— 7 months ago with 256 notes
#food  #plants  #agriculture  #ecology  #infographic  #national geographic  #professional  #teaching  #history 
Breeding system, Woody vs herbaceous, Storage morphology, Leaf type, and Geographic range, all coded along the phylogeny we infer for Oxalis.

Breeding system, Woody vs herbaceous, Storage morphology, Leaf type, and Geographic range, all coded along the phylogeny we infer for Oxalis.

— 10 months ago with 1 note
#BSA 2011  #design  #heterostyly  #infographic  #leaf  #oxalis  #professional  #phylogeny  #evolution 
scientificillustration:

Sauropod neck lengths
From: ‘The long necks of sauropods did not evolve primarily through sexual selection’ Journal of Zoology, Taylor, M.T., Hone, D.W.E., Wedel, M.J. & Naish, D. in press.

scientificillustration:

Sauropod neck lengths

From: ‘The long necks of sauropods did not evolve primarily through sexual selection’ Journal of Zoology, Taylor, M.T., Hone, D.W.E., Wedel, M.J. & Naish, D. in press.

— 12 months ago with 41 notes
#anatomy  #teaching  #evolution  #sauropod  #dinosaur  #neck  #ecology  #history  #phylogeny  #infographic  #design  #professional 
sabrinacampagna:

Diagram v/h Dichasium by Vuijk, J.

This diagram show one kind of Inflorescence called ‘Dichasium’ in frontal and top view.
via: GVNL

sabrinacampagna:

Diagram v/h Dichasium by Vuijk, J.

This diagram show one kind of Inflorescence called ‘Dichasium’ in frontal and top view.

via: GVNL

— 1 year ago with 42 notes
#inflorescence  #infographic  #art  #plants  #professional  #teaching 
sabrinacampagna:

Inflorescence Types. (circle – flower bud; arrow – vegetative bud). A, panicle; B, thyrsoid; C, thyrse; D, dichasium; E, monochasium;  F, triad; G, panicle-like; H, raceme; I, spike; J, umbel; K, corymb; L,  solitary on a scape; M, solitary in axils of leaves; N, spikelet; O,  head with expanded receptacle (in L.S.), as in many Asteraceae; P, head  with small receptacle (in L.S.); Q, spadix; R, cyathium (in L.S.).
found: here

sabrinacampagna:

Inflorescence Types. (circle – flower bud; arrow – vegetative bud).
A, panicle; B, thyrsoid; C, thyrse; D, dichasium; E, monochasium; F, triad; G, panicle-like; H, raceme; I, spike; J, umbel; K, corymb; L, solitary on a scape; M, solitary in axils of leaves; N, spikelet; O, head with expanded receptacle (in L.S.), as in many Asteraceae; P, head with small receptacle (in L.S.); Q, spadix; R, cyathium (in L.S.).

found: here

— 1 year ago with 43 notes
#infographic  #design  #plants  #inflorescence  #cyme  #professional  #teaching 
NPR-During the Ice Age, Joshua trees thrived across the American  Southwest. Now some scientists are predicting that global warming will  cause the unusual desert tree to disappear, too — at least in its  namesake national park.
Scientists predict  that climate change will evict many plants and animals from areas where  they have long flourished. Some will be able to migrate to more  hospitable climates, but many — like the Joshua tree — face huge  obstacles to moving and adapting.
The Role of Giant Sloth Dung
To  grasp the current plight of the Joshua tree, it’s helpful to travel to  Gypsum Cave outside Las Vegas. In the 1930s, scientists exploring there  found parts of skeletons, hides and hair from the giant ground sloth —  an animal that had been extinct for 13,000 years. Many layers of the  sloth’s dung also survived.
Inside the dung was evidence that Joshua trees were a favorite food of the sloth: leaves and seeds and fruits.
The  sloths were hulking beasts that resembled “a fuzzy Volkswagen Beetle”  according to Ken Cole, a biologist and geologist for the U.S. Geological  Survey. After munching on Joshua trees, a sloth might travel 10 miles  or more before leaving a deposit of the seeds in dung. The result was a  sort of starter kit for Joshua trees: seeds with their own supply of  fertilizer.
At Gypsum Cave, a small deposit  of the ancient dung remains, looking a lot like shredded wheat.  Remarkably, after 13,000 years, it still produces an odor.
“I think of it as like a grass — maybe not a hay smell, but similar to that,” says Sandy Swift, a colleague of Co’e’s.
The  ground sloth didn’t survive the big warm-up after the Ice Age, so it  could no longer play Johnny Appleseed for Joshua trees. And since then,  the trees’ range has shrunk to one-tenth of what it was.
Threatened by Warmer Climes
Cole  says no modern animal is capable of helping the Joshua tree migrate  long distances. So Cole predicts global warming will shrink the tree’s  range still more.
“It looks from our modeling  that Joshua Tree National Park and pretty much the southern half of the  range would be too warm in the next 50 to 100 years to support Joshua  trees anymore,” Cole says.
That news caught the attention of top officials in the National Park Service and rangers in the park in southeastern California.
“One  of the questions I guess we talk about, at least internally, on an  informal basis, is ‘What do we have here without Joshua trees?’” says  Joe Zarki, a longtime ranger.
Joshua trees  are a type of yucca that grow 30 feet or taller. The ends of their short  branches are covered with clusters of green leaves with spiny tips. An  early explorer named John Freemont called it the “most repulsive plant  in the vegetable kingdom,” Zarki says.
“People  nowadays, I think, look at it and see this really distinctive, sort of  whimsical plant,” Zarki says. “I like them. It’s a plant with  character.”
Jim Cornett, an independent  ecologist who has been studying Joshua trees for almost 20 years,  doesn’t buy Ken Cole’s grim prediction about the trees disappearing from  the park.
“There’s no question that a  warming of the climate would reduce the suitable habitat for Joshua  trees in the park — but not eliminate it,” Cornett says.
Cornett believes the trees would still grow in the higher, cooler elevations of the park.
Still,  hiking across the desert on a gorgeous day, Cornett says Joshua trees  have done poorly since he started tracking them. As an example, he stops  at a large, dead Joshua tree lying on the sandy ground.
“It  was a magnificent tree when we started the study, and now it’s dead,”  Cornett says. “And this one is dead. And that one over there is dead. I  can find a dozen trees that have died during the study and only one tree  that came up.”
The trees in some hotter  sections of the park have fared even worse. But Cornett says he can  attribute their deaths to severe droughts and fires in recent years.
He concedes that climate change may be playing a role.
Ecosystem-Wide Repercussions
One thing’s for certain: if Joshua trees go, the whole ecosystem will suffer.
During the driest times, the only way many animals can find moisture is by gnawing through the bark of live trees.
“Things  like the antelope ground squirrel, the desert wood rat and the  blacktail jack rabbit are now all known to utilize that moisture during  times of extreme drought. And of course, if those animals survive, then  the coyotes, the foxes and the hawks continue to have animals to prey on  and then they survive, as well. So the Joshua tree is the great canteen  of the desert,” he says.
The trees are a great draw for tourists.
Loretta  and Jim Gilbert, from Seal Beach, Calif., were visiting the park to  celebrate Jim’s retirement. They said they couldn’t imagine the park  without its signature trees.
“It would not be  Joshua Tree any longer. It would just be space,” Loretta Gilbert says.  “The Joshua trees are very special, something I would hope the future  generations would be able to see and enjoy.”
Park  officials fear that saving the trees is beyond their control, because  stopping or slowing global warming will take a worldwide effort.

NPR-During the Ice Age, Joshua trees thrived across the American Southwest. Now some scientists are predicting that global warming will cause the unusual desert tree to disappear, too — at least in its namesake national park.

Scientists predict that climate change will evict many plants and animals from areas where they have long flourished. Some will be able to migrate to more hospitable climates, but many — like the Joshua tree — face huge obstacles to moving and adapting.

The Role of Giant Sloth Dung

To grasp the current plight of the Joshua tree, it’s helpful to travel to Gypsum Cave outside Las Vegas. In the 1930s, scientists exploring there found parts of skeletons, hides and hair from the giant ground sloth — an animal that had been extinct for 13,000 years. Many layers of the sloth’s dung also survived.

Inside the dung was evidence that Joshua trees were a favorite food of the sloth: leaves and seeds and fruits.

The sloths were hulking beasts that resembled “a fuzzy Volkswagen Beetle” according to Ken Cole, a biologist and geologist for the U.S. Geological Survey. After munching on Joshua trees, a sloth might travel 10 miles or more before leaving a deposit of the seeds in dung. The result was a sort of starter kit for Joshua trees: seeds with their own supply of fertilizer.

At Gypsum Cave, a small deposit of the ancient dung remains, looking a lot like shredded wheat. Remarkably, after 13,000 years, it still produces an odor.

“I think of it as like a grass — maybe not a hay smell, but similar to that,” says Sandy Swift, a colleague of Co’e’s.

The ground sloth didn’t survive the big warm-up after the Ice Age, so it could no longer play Johnny Appleseed for Joshua trees. And since then, the trees’ range has shrunk to one-tenth of what it was.

Threatened by Warmer Climes

Cole says no modern animal is capable of helping the Joshua tree migrate long distances. So Cole predicts global warming will shrink the tree’s range still more.

“It looks from our modeling that Joshua Tree National Park and pretty much the southern half of the range would be too warm in the next 50 to 100 years to support Joshua trees anymore,” Cole says.

That news caught the attention of top officials in the National Park Service and rangers in the park in southeastern California.

“One of the questions I guess we talk about, at least internally, on an informal basis, is ‘What do we have here without Joshua trees?’” says Joe Zarki, a longtime ranger.

Joshua trees are a type of yucca that grow 30 feet or taller. The ends of their short branches are covered with clusters of green leaves with spiny tips. An early explorer named John Freemont called it the “most repulsive plant in the vegetable kingdom,” Zarki says.

“People nowadays, I think, look at it and see this really distinctive, sort of whimsical plant,” Zarki says. “I like them. It’s a plant with character.”

Jim Cornett, an independent ecologist who has been studying Joshua trees for almost 20 years, doesn’t buy Ken Cole’s grim prediction about the trees disappearing from the park.

“There’s no question that a warming of the climate would reduce the suitable habitat for Joshua trees in the park — but not eliminate it,” Cornett says.

Cornett believes the trees would still grow in the higher, cooler elevations of the park.

Still, hiking across the desert on a gorgeous day, Cornett says Joshua trees have done poorly since he started tracking them. As an example, he stops at a large, dead Joshua tree lying on the sandy ground.

“It was a magnificent tree when we started the study, and now it’s dead,” Cornett says. “And this one is dead. And that one over there is dead. I can find a dozen trees that have died during the study and only one tree that came up.”

The trees in some hotter sections of the park have fared even worse. But Cornett says he can attribute their deaths to severe droughts and fires in recent years.

He concedes that climate change may be playing a role.

Ecosystem-Wide Repercussions

One thing’s for certain: if Joshua trees go, the whole ecosystem will suffer.

During the driest times, the only way many animals can find moisture is by gnawing through the bark of live trees.

“Things like the antelope ground squirrel, the desert wood rat and the blacktail jack rabbit are now all known to utilize that moisture during times of extreme drought. And of course, if those animals survive, then the coyotes, the foxes and the hawks continue to have animals to prey on and then they survive, as well. So the Joshua tree is the great canteen of the desert,” he says.

The trees are a great draw for tourists.

Loretta and Jim Gilbert, from Seal Beach, Calif., were visiting the park to celebrate Jim’s retirement. They said they couldn’t imagine the park without its signature trees.

“It would not be Joshua Tree any longer. It would just be space,” Loretta Gilbert says. “The Joshua trees are very special, something I would hope the future generations would be able to see and enjoy.”

Park officials fear that saving the trees is beyond their control, because stopping or slowing global warming will take a worldwide effort.

— 1 year ago with 5 notes
#joshua tree  #california  #climate  #ecology  #professional  #npr  #evolution  #biology  #infographic  #map 
roomthily:

Restless Ice - speed of ice movement in Greenland
via NYTimes.com

roomthily:

Restless Ice - speed of ice movement in Greenland

via NYTimes.com

— 1 year ago with 5 notes
#climate  #glacier  #greenland  #infographic  #map  #nytimes  #science 
robobigfoot:

This helps to make most patterns in the world make sense.

robobigfoot:

This helps to make most patterns in the world make sense.

— 1 year ago with 5 notes
#design  #infographic  #professional  #science  #teaching  #b&w 
Here’s my little corner of your paycheck.
This link has a really impressive set of infographics. 
http://learning.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/08/24/teaching-with-infographics-social-studies-history-economics/

Here’s my little corner of your paycheck.

This link has a really impressive set of infographics. 

http://learning.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/08/24/teaching-with-infographics-social-studies-history-economics/

— 1 year ago
#nytimes  #infographic  #professional  #teaching  #design