Menu

Skip to content
  • Home|
  • About|
  • Participate|
  • Social Directory|

The Well:

MBL News from the Source

You are here: Home / Our Favorite Science Photos of 2018 | Science Magazine

Our Favorite Science Photos of 2018 | Science Magazine

Published on December 12, 2018
Our Favorite Science Photos of 2018 | Science Magazine
Share on Facebook
Facebook
Pin on Pinterest
Pinterest
Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter
Share on LinkedIn
Linkedin

A photo taken in the MBL Embryology Course is one of Science’s picks!

By Emily Petersen

Our Science Visuals team reviewed the most striking photographs we published this year. Here are the ones that moved us the most. Read more …

Caption:

The transition from single cell to multicell organisms—a major step in evolution—may not have been as complex as originally thought. Students in the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, use multiple stains to highlight the specialized cells in these delicately constructed juvenile squid, Loligo pealei. Credit: WANG CHI LAU/EMBRYOLOGY COURSE AT THE MARINE BIOLOGICAL LABORATORY

Source: Science photos of the year | Science Magazine

Posted in Course Connection | Tagged via bookmarklet

Post navigation

← Outsmarting Ocean Acidification | CapeCod.com Superstars of Regeneration | The Washington Post →

Course Connection

  • Sharon Begley, Path-Breaking Science Journalist, Dies at 64 | STAT
  • Microbial ‘omics for the Masses | Medicine on the Midway
  • A Conversation with Hari Shroff | Bitesize Bio Podcasts and Zeiss Microscopy
  • When Mentorship Runs in the Family: Society for Neuroscience Honors SPINES Faculty
  • Bats and Chameleons, Oh My! MBL Alumni Place in Nikon Photo Contest
  • MBL Course Faculty Member, Paulina Lishko, Receives MacArthur Fellowship
  • UChicago Students Learn Microbiome Research at MBL | UC Microbiome Center
  • Nobel Prize Honors Trio, Including MBL Physiology Alumnus, for Hepatitis C Discovery
  • High-School Science Discovery Program Flourishes
  • Why Can Only Some Animals Regenerate? Killifish Study is Revealing | @Planaria1
Archived Posts

Subscribe to the Well

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts.

Copyright © 2021 Marine Biological Laboratory