month team or more had to his ph d. student philip he may have prepared countless specimens like this one. and. the best thing about this technique is that you always discover things you weren t expecting when you look at a fish from the outside you hardly have any idea what s inside it. and when you have a new cleared specimen and look at it under the microscope it s incredible how many amazing structures you can discover. and they can come. for example here in syria now or in the share or taiwan where the scientists have conducted field studies searching for new species of fish many of their specimens come from swamp areas in africa or from asian fish markets every specimen is examined using a microscope and then photographed this produces fascinating images that display
a science question that you ve always wanted answered we re happy to help out it s a little ass as a video text ovoid smell if we answer it on the show we ll send you a little surprise as a thank you can i just ask. you ll find as i did have a dot com slash science all drop us a line at d w underscore site tech on facebook d w dot science. time for al. video of the week this 3 d. printed robot fascinated many of us. it s a model of all robotics tops to an extinct tetrapod that lived during the permian era around 219000000 years ago. scientists at berlin s home bought university and the planet take in stitches of luzon drew on the fossil and fossil tracks to create a robot simulation. called
it to us as a video text ovoid smell if we answer it on the show we ll send you a little surprise as a thank you can i just ask. you ll find as i did have a dot com slash science all drop us a line at d.f.w. undisclosed high tech on facebook d.w. dot science. time flowers. video of the week this three d. printed robot fascinated many of us. it s a model of all of baathist tops to an extinct tetrapod that lived during the permian era around two hundred and nineteen million years ago. scientists at berlin s home bought university and the planet take in stitches of luzon drew on a fossil and fossil tracks to create a robot simulation. called
month team or more had from his ph d. student philip he may have prepared countless specimens like this one. the best thing about this technique is that you always discover things you weren t expecting when you look at a fish from the outside you hardly have any idea what s inside it. and when you have a new cleared specimen and look at it under the microscope it s incredible how many amazing structures you can discover. and they can come. for example here in syria now or in the share or taiwan where the scientists have conducted field studies searching for new species of fish many of their specimens come from swamp areas in africa or from asian fish markets. every specimen is examined using a microscope and then photographed this produces fascinating images that display the fish anatomy in great detail. my very first clear specimens already gave me the
a thank you can i just ask. did you find as i did have a dot com slash science or drop us a line at e w underscore site tech on facebook d w dot science. time for al. video of the week this three d. printed robot fascinated many of us. it s a model of all a baathist chopstick an extinct tetrapod that lived during the permian era around two hundred and nineteen million years ago. scientists at berlin about university and the playtex institute of luzon on the fossil and fossil tracks to create a robot simulation. called our robots it s made out of motors with flexible plastic and steel.