M. C. Escher, Snakes (Woodcut print), 1969.

Artatomical: T-shaped Incision by Max Brödel
Here’s another dose of Artatomical for you, in which we stand back and consider the intersection of art and science in the realm of medical illustration. This time it’s an illustration by German-American artist Max Brödel (1870-1941), from the 1922 text “Diseases of the Kidneys, Ureters and Bladder” by gynecologist Howard Atwood Kelly…
Sleek, agile, alert, and monstrously long. Find out how the king cobra
earned its crown and whether or not snake charmers are really
hypnotizing this majestic snake.
What’s the largest snake that ever lived? Outside the fantastic serpents of myth and fiction, you’ll have to seek your answer in the tropics of Asia, South America and the prehistoric Earth.
Phobias can arise from all sorts of lurking dangers, like venomous snakes. But holes? Is trypophobia really a thing? Find out why a person might fear an array of innocent holes and the role social contagion could play.
Image Credit: Composite Image to make you feel bad. (kworq/Getty and DEA / V. GIANNELLA/De Agostini/Getty)
Related Content:
Trypophobia Gallery of Pre-Existing Things
Fear of Holes – Science on the Web (video)
Phobia of the Week: Navel Horror
Phobia of the Week: Coulrophobia
Phobia of the Week: V2K Anxiety
Phobia of the Week: Arachnophobia
Dread Anxiety (podcast)
It Existed: The Camel-Mounted Gatling Gun
Nope, that’s not a Photoshop job or an illustration for the latest alternate history book. During the mid 1850s, you really did find camel-mounted hand-cranked Gatling guns.
The innovation followed the Turkish zamburak tradition of camel-mounted weaponry — first the crossbow, then power guns and eventually rapid-fire Gatling guns mounted on a swivel.
READ & SEE MORE: http://is.gd/iYL2Co
Retrofuturist Flashback: Electric Spaceship, 1775
Here we see a “traveler from the planet Mercury arriving on Earth in his wonderful new electric flying machine. It’s a 1775 illustration from “The Philosopher Without Pretension or the Rare Man” by French author and polymath Louis Guillaume de la Folie.
READ & SEE MORE: http://is.gd/dL9h1a
We have some cool merch for you! A cool way to support the show and spread the word – and you can take advantage of Black Friday and Black Monday deals right now! https://www.teepublic.com/stores/stufftoblowyourmind?ref_id=5180
Event Horizon (1997) dir. Paul W.S. Anderson
Cinematography by Adrian Biddle
