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Questions?
contact@scienceart-nature.org
Brochure
Your support will encourage the production of Science Art that reminds us of our place in nature and our responsibiity to understand its limits.
Sincere thanks to donors this past year:
an anonymous donor, on behalf of Santa Clara Valley
Audubon Society
Paul and Anne Ehrlich
Humanist Community at Stanford University
Pam Meadowcroft and Jim Holland
Ida Wheye and two anonymous donors
Science Art-Nature
P.O. Box 18754
Palo Alto, CA 94309-8754
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Become a Science Adviser: If you are interested in reviewing images and captions
entered in future virtual exhibits or serving on exhibition juries.
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Comment on Exhibits: If you are interested in sending your reactions to an exhibit, we welcome your comments. These comments will help us plan and produce future exhibitions.
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| Syntarsus (Dinosaur) ©Jeffrey Whiting/Science Art
Named for its fused tarus bones, this small, quick predator might have hopped and might have been warm-blooded.;
Bat-eared Fox Portrait, © Carel Brest van Kempen/Science Art
Termite specialists, these foxes, have exceptional teeth and excavate complex tunnel networks.;
One Fig At A Time ©Gamini Ratnavira/Science Art
Great Indian Hornbills, found in the Indian subcontinent, are at risk to cask-hunters and deforestation.;
Fanny Got Bling © Andrew Denman/Science Art
Victoria Crowned Pigeons are capable of “stunning, for instance, a threatening snake with a powerful karate-chop like blow.";
Golden Eagle, Magdalena, NM (Aquila chrysaetos) © Julie Zickefoose/Science Art
Gliding and soaring are the sort of economical flight expected in a big bird with a huge home range. |