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When contemporary design and millennia-old ice sheets collide

When contemporary design and millennia-old ice sheets collide

Tasmanian designer Brodie Neill has been obsessing over icebergs. For the past three months in his London studio, he's experimented with ways to convey the beauty of their colours and textures as he develops new furniture and objects inspired by a six-week artist-in-residency on the edge of an ice shelf in Antarctica.
'When you first look, everything just seems stark blue and white,' he says of his expedition aboard the Schmidt Ocean Institute's research ship, Falkor (too). 'But as your eyes adapt, you start to see glacial layers of intensely varied hues that are markers of millennia of climatic shifts.'

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'Completely wacko': take a peek inside Australia's quirky native animals
'Completely wacko': take a peek inside Australia's quirky native animals

The Advertiser

time5 days ago

  • The Advertiser

'Completely wacko': take a peek inside Australia's quirky native animals

The secret lives of some of Australia's most unique wildlife like koalas, kangaroos and platypuses are being revealed through a new, publicly available 3D image collection of their bones. The Ozboneviz database allows researchers, educators, students and members of the public to explore the inner make up of even some extinct mammals. The three-dimensional images allow people to view the skeletons "as if they held a bone in their hand", Flinders University's Associate Professor Vera Weisbecker said. The scans reveal a side of well-known animals most people never see, such as the platypus, which has pincer-like bones in its skull. "Platypus are, they're weird on the outside and on the inside, so they're a really special case - and echidnas as well, which are the platypus's closest relatives," Associate Professor Weisbecker said. "[They're] just wacko because ... they're using their beaks a bit like a like a metal detector is used, so they swish their beak over the the the bottom of the lake and get little crabs and things, just by picking up on the electric impulses of their prey, which is the most amazing adaptation." She said platypus arm bones looked like butterflies. "When you think about an upper arm like a humerus, you think of the typical sort of bone with two thicker ends, like what's under a skull and crossbone," she said. "The upper arm, it looks like an hourglass or a butterfly because they are using these arms to do this specialised digging and it just makes whole bone crazy-looking." Seeing the cranium of a koala in 3D also sheds new light on how the iconic species survives. "The skull tells you everything about what an animal eats and its sensory system," the evolutionary biologist said. "Koalas, they have a very strange sort of combination of a rounded head and a really long snout, and that's something that you can only see when you look at it in detail and you compare it to something like a wombat skull which is much thicker." Being able to examine the bones of the kangaroo, the largest animal to hop, can also provide some insights into its evolution. "They're a really ancient group of animals that have evolved in isolation for 40 million years and people often think of them as a bit primitive compared to animals like cows and sheep ... but kangaroos are the obvious example for how that isn't true in the slightest because they have these really bizarre leg bones," she said. "The shin bone of a kangaroo is so large compared to the femur, the upper thigh bone, so it's completely disproportionate to anything you've ever seen. It's got these really long feet. "So it's just completely wacko." The image database of around nearly 200 species includes extinct animals like the desert rat kangaroo, pig-footed bandicoot and thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger. "They were the really special ones because they are the ones that even the scientists, when they visit a museum, they don't necessarily get to see these animals or handle them because the bones are so valuable," Associate Professor Weisbecker said. "The extinct ones are sitting in museum collections, very well protected and what we did is - we went in and scanned them." Australia's largest open-access atlas of its kind is a collaboration funded by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage and supported by the Australian Museum, South Australian and Northern Territory museums, the Australian National Wildlife Collection, and a number of universities. It can be viewed on MorphoSource. The secret lives of some of Australia's most unique wildlife like koalas, kangaroos and platypuses are being revealed through a new, publicly available 3D image collection of their bones. The Ozboneviz database allows researchers, educators, students and members of the public to explore the inner make up of even some extinct mammals. The three-dimensional images allow people to view the skeletons "as if they held a bone in their hand", Flinders University's Associate Professor Vera Weisbecker said. The scans reveal a side of well-known animals most people never see, such as the platypus, which has pincer-like bones in its skull. "Platypus are, they're weird on the outside and on the inside, so they're a really special case - and echidnas as well, which are the platypus's closest relatives," Associate Professor Weisbecker said. "[They're] just wacko because ... they're using their beaks a bit like a like a metal detector is used, so they swish their beak over the the the bottom of the lake and get little crabs and things, just by picking up on the electric impulses of their prey, which is the most amazing adaptation." She said platypus arm bones looked like butterflies. "When you think about an upper arm like a humerus, you think of the typical sort of bone with two thicker ends, like what's under a skull and crossbone," she said. "The upper arm, it looks like an hourglass or a butterfly because they are using these arms to do this specialised digging and it just makes whole bone crazy-looking." Seeing the cranium of a koala in 3D also sheds new light on how the iconic species survives. "The skull tells you everything about what an animal eats and its sensory system," the evolutionary biologist said. "Koalas, they have a very strange sort of combination of a rounded head and a really long snout, and that's something that you can only see when you look at it in detail and you compare it to something like a wombat skull which is much thicker." Being able to examine the bones of the kangaroo, the largest animal to hop, can also provide some insights into its evolution. "They're a really ancient group of animals that have evolved in isolation for 40 million years and people often think of them as a bit primitive compared to animals like cows and sheep ... but kangaroos are the obvious example for how that isn't true in the slightest because they have these really bizarre leg bones," she said. "The shin bone of a kangaroo is so large compared to the femur, the upper thigh bone, so it's completely disproportionate to anything you've ever seen. It's got these really long feet. "So it's just completely wacko." The image database of around nearly 200 species includes extinct animals like the desert rat kangaroo, pig-footed bandicoot and thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger. "They were the really special ones because they are the ones that even the scientists, when they visit a museum, they don't necessarily get to see these animals or handle them because the bones are so valuable," Associate Professor Weisbecker said. "The extinct ones are sitting in museum collections, very well protected and what we did is - we went in and scanned them." Australia's largest open-access atlas of its kind is a collaboration funded by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage and supported by the Australian Museum, South Australian and Northern Territory museums, the Australian National Wildlife Collection, and a number of universities. It can be viewed on MorphoSource. The secret lives of some of Australia's most unique wildlife like koalas, kangaroos and platypuses are being revealed through a new, publicly available 3D image collection of their bones. The Ozboneviz database allows researchers, educators, students and members of the public to explore the inner make up of even some extinct mammals. The three-dimensional images allow people to view the skeletons "as if they held a bone in their hand", Flinders University's Associate Professor Vera Weisbecker said. The scans reveal a side of well-known animals most people never see, such as the platypus, which has pincer-like bones in its skull. "Platypus are, they're weird on the outside and on the inside, so they're a really special case - and echidnas as well, which are the platypus's closest relatives," Associate Professor Weisbecker said. "[They're] just wacko because ... they're using their beaks a bit like a like a metal detector is used, so they swish their beak over the the the bottom of the lake and get little crabs and things, just by picking up on the electric impulses of their prey, which is the most amazing adaptation." She said platypus arm bones looked like butterflies. "When you think about an upper arm like a humerus, you think of the typical sort of bone with two thicker ends, like what's under a skull and crossbone," she said. "The upper arm, it looks like an hourglass or a butterfly because they are using these arms to do this specialised digging and it just makes whole bone crazy-looking." Seeing the cranium of a koala in 3D also sheds new light on how the iconic species survives. "The skull tells you everything about what an animal eats and its sensory system," the evolutionary biologist said. "Koalas, they have a very strange sort of combination of a rounded head and a really long snout, and that's something that you can only see when you look at it in detail and you compare it to something like a wombat skull which is much thicker." Being able to examine the bones of the kangaroo, the largest animal to hop, can also provide some insights into its evolution. "They're a really ancient group of animals that have evolved in isolation for 40 million years and people often think of them as a bit primitive compared to animals like cows and sheep ... but kangaroos are the obvious example for how that isn't true in the slightest because they have these really bizarre leg bones," she said. "The shin bone of a kangaroo is so large compared to the femur, the upper thigh bone, so it's completely disproportionate to anything you've ever seen. It's got these really long feet. "So it's just completely wacko." The image database of around nearly 200 species includes extinct animals like the desert rat kangaroo, pig-footed bandicoot and thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger. "They were the really special ones because they are the ones that even the scientists, when they visit a museum, they don't necessarily get to see these animals or handle them because the bones are so valuable," Associate Professor Weisbecker said. "The extinct ones are sitting in museum collections, very well protected and what we did is - we went in and scanned them." Australia's largest open-access atlas of its kind is a collaboration funded by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage and supported by the Australian Museum, South Australian and Northern Territory museums, the Australian National Wildlife Collection, and a number of universities. It can be viewed on MorphoSource. The secret lives of some of Australia's most unique wildlife like koalas, kangaroos and platypuses are being revealed through a new, publicly available 3D image collection of their bones. The Ozboneviz database allows researchers, educators, students and members of the public to explore the inner make up of even some extinct mammals. The three-dimensional images allow people to view the skeletons "as if they held a bone in their hand", Flinders University's Associate Professor Vera Weisbecker said. The scans reveal a side of well-known animals most people never see, such as the platypus, which has pincer-like bones in its skull. "Platypus are, they're weird on the outside and on the inside, so they're a really special case - and echidnas as well, which are the platypus's closest relatives," Associate Professor Weisbecker said. "[They're] just wacko because ... they're using their beaks a bit like a like a metal detector is used, so they swish their beak over the the the bottom of the lake and get little crabs and things, just by picking up on the electric impulses of their prey, which is the most amazing adaptation." She said platypus arm bones looked like butterflies. "When you think about an upper arm like a humerus, you think of the typical sort of bone with two thicker ends, like what's under a skull and crossbone," she said. "The upper arm, it looks like an hourglass or a butterfly because they are using these arms to do this specialised digging and it just makes whole bone crazy-looking." Seeing the cranium of a koala in 3D also sheds new light on how the iconic species survives. "The skull tells you everything about what an animal eats and its sensory system," the evolutionary biologist said. "Koalas, they have a very strange sort of combination of a rounded head and a really long snout, and that's something that you can only see when you look at it in detail and you compare it to something like a wombat skull which is much thicker." Being able to examine the bones of the kangaroo, the largest animal to hop, can also provide some insights into its evolution. "They're a really ancient group of animals that have evolved in isolation for 40 million years and people often think of them as a bit primitive compared to animals like cows and sheep ... but kangaroos are the obvious example for how that isn't true in the slightest because they have these really bizarre leg bones," she said. "The shin bone of a kangaroo is so large compared to the femur, the upper thigh bone, so it's completely disproportionate to anything you've ever seen. It's got these really long feet. "So it's just completely wacko." The image database of around nearly 200 species includes extinct animals like the desert rat kangaroo, pig-footed bandicoot and thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger. "They were the really special ones because they are the ones that even the scientists, when they visit a museum, they don't necessarily get to see these animals or handle them because the bones are so valuable," Associate Professor Weisbecker said. "The extinct ones are sitting in museum collections, very well protected and what we did is - we went in and scanned them." Australia's largest open-access atlas of its kind is a collaboration funded by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage and supported by the Australian Museum, South Australian and Northern Territory museums, the Australian National Wildlife Collection, and a number of universities. It can be viewed on MorphoSource.

When contemporary design and millennia-old ice sheets collide
When contemporary design and millennia-old ice sheets collide

AU Financial Review

time03-06-2025

  • AU Financial Review

When contemporary design and millennia-old ice sheets collide

Tasmanian designer Brodie Neill has been obsessing over icebergs. For the past three months in his London studio, he's experimented with ways to convey the beauty of their colours and textures as he develops new furniture and objects inspired by a six-week artist-in-residency on the edge of an ice shelf in Antarctica. 'When you first look, everything just seems stark blue and white,' he says of his expedition aboard the Schmidt Ocean Institute's research ship, Falkor (too). 'But as your eyes adapt, you start to see glacial layers of intensely varied hues that are markers of millennia of climatic shifts.'

Shire of Harvey ‘gives a hoot' becoming the newest South West shire to join the Owl Friendly movement
Shire of Harvey ‘gives a hoot' becoming the newest South West shire to join the Owl Friendly movement

West Australian

time02-06-2025

  • West Australian

Shire of Harvey ‘gives a hoot' becoming the newest South West shire to join the Owl Friendly movement

The Shire of Harvey has shown it 'gives a hoot' by becoming the newest South West shire to join the Owl Friendly movement. The move will see the shire eliminating the use of Second Generation Anti-Coagulant Rodenticides within shire-owned buildings and pushing to inform the community of the dangers of the insidious and lethal poison. The Owl Friendly movement initially stated in Margaret River when researchers looking at the elusive masked owl saw the impact SGARs were having on the native owl population. Since then, the movement has grown to cover shires and cities across the State, with the City of Cockburn, City of Geraldton and most recently the City of Stirling among just some of the Local governments across WA to adopt an Owl Friendly status. The movement specifically targets SGARs — often advertised as one dose, one kill poisons — which can take up to a week to kill an animal after ingesting and take a significant amount of time to break down once in the environment. Due to the poison's longevity and its delay in causing death, rodents which have ingested the poison can be caught and devoured by other animals — such as owls, snakes or even pet dogs and cats — delivering the deadly dose intended to the rodent its devourer instead. The poison has proved so pervasive it has been found in possums across Australia and has been found at lethal levels within a critically endangered Carnaby's black-cockatoo. In an even more recent Edith Cowan University-led research paper SGARs were found in five of Australia's large native carnivores from WA's chuditch to the critically endangered Tasmanian devil. SGARs have been banned in the United Kingdom and California, but still are able to be purchased on the shelf in most Australian stores. The move to make the Shire of Harvey Owl Friendly came from shire president Michelle Campbell who said it was a simple act the shire could adopt, and came at an apt time with the shire also voting to adopt its first biodiversity strategy earlier in the meeting. 'We are not the first local government to consider this and hopefully not the last moving forward,' she said. 'Second generation rodenticides are indiscriminate and the eradication of its use will not only be beneficial to owls and birds, but also to many other native animals and our domestic pets.'

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