I used this Guess the SEM TEM Microscopic images activity with my Middle School Students to wrap up Life Science and reinforce types of microscopes. Included is an 80 slide bright and colorful guessing type activity, where students will see the up close, scanning and transmission electron microscope created images, and can guess as to what the common objects are: egg surface, strawberry, banana, blueberry, salt, sugar, just to name a few. Also a great section is the TEM images of cell organelles, so if you also cover this in your curriculum, it is a great review for this as well. There is also a part of the Google Slides that encompasses microscopic photography of animal eyes. Google Slides makes integration with GAFE seamless. When you click, the object's name comes up across the top. You have full reign of this activity, and can edit/add as needed. This usually takes the better part of 2 class periods, and I usually leave it for the end of notes over several days. Please also see my PowerPoint (.PPTX) version of this same resource that downloads as a separate PowerPoint file that you can save and edit/post/present as you see fit.
This illustration depicted a three-dimensional (3D), computer-generated image, of a group of Gram-positive, Corynebacterium diphtheriae, bacteria. The artistic recreation was based upon scanning electron microscopic (SEM) imagery. CDC/ Sarah Bailey Cutchin, 2016 Illustrator: Jennifer Oosthuizen Each matte canvas comes with back hanging already included for convenient placement. The frame is made with profile radial pine that is ethically sourced from renewable forests. .: Cotton and polyester canvas composite with a special proprietary coating .: Inner frame made with radial pine sourced from renewable forests .: Soft rubber dots on bottom back corners for support .: Back hanging included
Produced by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), this digitally colorized scanning electron microscopic (SEM) image, depicts a grouping of red-colored, rod shaped, Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacteria, which cause tuberculosis (TB) in human beings. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), 2010 Each matte canvas comes with back hanging already included for convenient placement. The frame is made with profile radial pine that is ethically sourced from renewable forests. .: Cotton and polyester canvas composite with a special proprietary coating .: Inner frame made with radial pine sourced from renewable forests .: Soft rubber dots on bottom back corners for support .: Back hanging included
Food under the microscope: scanning electron micrographs of foodstuffs.
Cards for Matching and Concentration Games include the following 36 SEM Images: Bee Stinger Beeβs Eye Brown Sugar Coral Cork cell walls Daisy Fleabane Flower Daphnia Diatom β Aulacoseira Diatom β Nitzschia Diatom β Stephanodiscus Euglena Flea Fruit fly head Goose Feather Grasshopper head House fly head Hydra Ladybug Milkweed Seed Mosquito head β a female Paramecium Pill bug Pollen β Butterfly Bush Pollen β Chicory flower Pollen - Daisy fleabane flower Pollen β Black Medic flower Pollen β goatsbeard flower Pollen β Goldenrod flower Pollen β Ragweed Salt β table salt Salvia Pollen surface Sea Sponge Silverfish Small Ant Spider silk Sugar β white granulated This set of cards is coordinated with the Guessing Game #1. It includes all the images in Guessing Game #1 plus the starred images. Two copies of each card are provided to make printing easy. Cards should be printed on 110# Card Stock for best results. Laminating makes them more durable. Tiny Worlds β Suzanne Eder and Beverly Elliott [email protected]
Encyclopedia article about Mitochondria by The Free Dictionary
Millions of minuscule mites share our wide world. Mites are arachnids, much like spiders and scorpions, and the microscopic creatures are among the oldest and most plentiful invertebrates on the planet.
Love 'em or hate 'em, you've got to admit that spiders are some pretty impressive animals. Movies like "Arachnophobia", "Spider-Man" and "Eight Legged Freaks" even spin their stories around spiders. Check out the real-life web-slinging, wall-crawling, venom-injecting inspiration.
Amazing images of everyday items taken with scanning electron microscope.
Microscope Image Guessing Game with Scanning Electron Microscope Pictures Sample includes images of Butterfly Wing Cat Fur Cottonwood Seed Hairs Eggshell Fruit Fly pupa Goldenrod Flower Petal Onion Cells Pollen Spider Egg Tick from Hawaii This game can be a great way to introduce SEM images and motivate students to learn more. Guessing which is which can be a cooperative learning experience and an opportunity to use a search engine to help discover the identity of the images. Give students or post the list of items and let your students do the matching. Other games in our store: Click this link for Microscope Image Guessing Game #2 Click this link for Microscope Image Guessing Game #1 Microscope Image Guessing Game #3 Microscope Image Guessing Game #4 Give the list of images to your students and let your students do the matching, then check their answers with the answer key. 3 3 2020 5316 9 29 2021 9083 10 24 2022 9953 02 06 2023 10125 02 14 2024 10757
Apple is increasing its European operations with an expansion in Cork, Ireland, by opening a new facility dedicated to product testing.
This blew me away! A snippet from a great message entitled How great is our God! by Louie Giglio, this section talks about Laminin, an amazing molecule in the human body. A must see! Full DVD...
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Have you ever wondered how you could determine the fiber content of a mystery yarn or fabric? I have compiled lots of color charts and pictures of how you can identify or at least narrow down what the fiber content is of a particular yarn or fabric using common materials that you have right now at home. I taught this as a 10-week Textile Analysis Lab course for Florida State University some time ago and I thought it was time to boil down all this information into an easy to follow guide and share it with other fiber artists, but hardly anyone has an electron microscope or other fancy equipment at home to do a total forensic study like we had at the University. I have been testing mystery yarns at home for years and I believe other fiber artists could benefit from the information and all my experience. I compiled this 31 page pamphlet to help anyone at home, discover what type of unlabeled yarn or fabric you might intend to use on your project so that you will understand what properties or characteristics it will display in use. I detail various yarn tests in Part One and in Part Two, I give you a list of the most commonly used fibers in the market today, their use and characteristics. There are lots of color pictures. You can compare the results of your tests with the charts and find out or narrow down the fiber content of the yarn or fabric you want to use for your project AND most importantly, if it is going to give you the performance you want. For example, you can find out if you are going to use a fiber for your project to which your intended recipient might have an allergic reaction. Blends are harder to determine, but you can at least eliminate most fibers through careful observation and comparing your results to the charts in the pamphlet.
The Sci-Fi world of Microscopic Photography
Creepy, cool and common stuff, magnified!