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The spectacular total solar eclipse that swept the United States dominated headlines as it delighted scientists and the public alike in August 2017 (the composite image above shows the event’s progression as seen from Perryville, Missouri). The year also brought innovations in space flight and surprising insights into species past. Here are the striking shots from science and the natural world that caught the eyes of Nature’s editors. (原文报道见:https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-017-08492-y).
WORM FROM HELL:This nightmarish creature is the pork tape worm Taenia solium, captured at ×200 magnification. The image was a finalist in Nikon’s Small World photography competition.
THE ONLY WAY IS UP!The arrow-shaped relief on this calcite crystal, imaged by a scanning electron microscope, is governed by a protein that binds to the crystal surface and patterns it as it grows.
UNDER THE LIGHT: This ultraviolet-light image by US photographer Craig Burrows reveals the hidden hues of an anemone flower.
BACK-SEAT OCTOPUS: This interspecies piggy back ride was caught by photographer Michael Hardie in the waters off Hawaii. The image was a finalist in the annual Smithsonian.com photocontest.
GROUND CONTROL: On the Norwegian island of Svalbard, low sunbacklights an antenna that downloads data from the Joint Polar SatelliteSystem-1. The craftlaunched in November as the first of a new set of US weather satellites.
SPARKS FLY: This tiny firework display was made by ‘electrospinning’, in which an electric charge draws fibres from a liquid.
FEARSOME FOSSIL: Meet Saccorhytus coronarius, a millimetre-scale fossil at least 529 million years old. The species, reported in January, might be the oldest known member of the deuterostomes, the animal group that includes vertebrates.
SEE-THROUGH PARENT: The eggs inside this pregnant ‘glass frog’ (Hyalinobatrachium colymbiphyllum) are clearly visible through its transparent belly.
A SINGLE CELL: What does a human cell weigh? In October, researchers in Switzerland unveiled this cantilever scaledesigned todetect minute fluctuations in a living cell’s mass.
BACK TO EARTH: US firm SpaceX made strides with its reusable-rocket system. Here, a stage of the Falcon 9 rocket lands back on a ship in the Pacific Ocean in January, after delivering satellites into orbit — a now‑routine procedure for the company.
ISOLATION ZONE: In May,volunteers were sealed into China’s Lunar Palace 1 research facility in Beijing, designed to test life-support systems for a base on the Moon.
ORANGE ABYSS:Heavy rains and run-off from surrounding forests give this underwater cavern — the Cenote Carwash off Tulum on Mexico’s Caribbean coast — its eerie tannic glow.
REEF RESTORATION: More than 400 coral ‘trees’ grow in this nursery off the coast of Tavernier, Florida. The set-up aims to nurture corals that inthe wild are increasingly endangered by threats such as warming waters and ocean acidification.
(原文报道见:https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-017-08492-y)
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