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Neurologist, writer, motorcycle racer, weightlifter, swimmer, and enthusiast of ferns, cycads, cephalopods and minerals—Oliver Sacks was a modern day Renaissance man. This website uses cookies to ...
ROGER HANLON: One of the most interesting and complex behaviors is their ability to camouflage, no matter where they go. DAVID LEVIN: Roger Hanlon studies octopuses at the Marine Biology Lab in ...
And you couldn't get a weirder looking animal. ROGER HANLON (Marine Biological Laboratory): Every place they go, they are morphing into something that looks a lot like that environment.
Roger Hanlon, a biologist at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, describes how you find and film sea creatures in hiding. Sponsor Message IRA FLATOW, host: Time now for our Video Pick ...
In research published today in the journal Biology Letters, MBL (Marine Biological Laboratory) researchers Lydia Mäthger and Roger Hanlon present evidence that the polarized aspect of the skin of ...
The tentacled undersea creature has long held the fascination of scientists, and for Dr. Roger Hanlon, the attraction began in his late teenage years when he explored coral reefs in Panama.
When marine biologist Roger Hanlon captured the first scene in this video he started screaming. (If you need to see it again, here's the raw footage.) Hanlon, senior scientist at the Marine Biological ...
Engineers were able to develop a flexible material that can morph from a simple two-dimensional surface into three-dimensional shapes or objects. The synthetic material could be used to develop ...