| Title: In Madera Canyon
Contact: Rick Wheeler
Description: The children's book, "In Madera Canyon" was recently nominated by ForeWord Book Awards for best "children's picture book," 2010. An educational book focusing on the flora and fauna of Madera Canyon, Arizona. Illustrations are scratchboard/watercolor with additional pencil drawings.
More information available at rickarts.com, bookoftheyearawards, and janeeholt.com. Available for purchase at Amazon.com
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| Title: Ow!
Contact: Gail Guth
Description: Illustration for spelling wall cards set, ©Developmental Studies Center (devstu.org). Provides older readers with basic instruction in phoneme awareness, phonics, and sight words. Ink line and colored pencil.
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| Title: Human Heart
Contact: Science Picture Company
Description: A close-up view of the human heart.
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| Title: Human musculature front and back
Contact: Carlyn Iverson
Description: Anatomical illustration, human musculature, front musclulature, back musculature
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| Title: Barbourofelis lovei
Contact: Katura Reynolds
Description: Barbourofelis was a large carnivore from Miocene North America. Though it resembles a saber-toothed cat, it's actually in a group called the nimravids, which is unrelated to modern felines. The painting is based on a cast of the fossil skull and observations of modern zoo animals.
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| Title: The Pancreas and Digestive System
Contact: Jane Whitney
Description: Labeled diagram of the pancreas and pancreatic duct and its orientation to other organs inside the body, for a grade 6 textbook.
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| Title: Dumbbell rowing anatomy
Contact: William Hamilton
Description: Female athlete demonstrating dumbbell rowing exercise.
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| Title: Dog Anatomy
Contact: Laurie O'Keefe
Description: Internal anatomy of the dog from the right side featuring the trachea,esophagus, lung, diphragm,heart, kidney, liver, intestine, pancreas, colon and bladder.
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| Title: Memory Loss
Contact: Travis Vermilye
Description: Editorial Illustration on memory loss and Alzheimer's disease.
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| Title: Kelp Forest Ecosystem
Contact: Barbara Harmon
Description: Kelp Forest food web: plankton, fish, sea urchins, sea otter, seals, killer whale, humpback whale.
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| Title: "Hoot"
Contact: Margaret Nelson
Description: Chimpanzee giving the "hoot" vocalization; silverpoint drawing
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| Title: Supine breast examination
Contact: Pam Little, CMI
Description: Patient placement for supine breast examination
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| Title: anatomy & physiology self portrait
Contact: Steven Melendrez
Description: Facial anatomy showing selective features.
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| Title: Cat and Locust
Contact: Trudy Nicholson
Description: Graphite pencil on scratchboard. Cat based on artist's observation and photographs. Locust based on preserved specimen. Published in Astro-Med Grass Calendar. 1998.
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| Title: Winter Survival
Contact: Frank Ippolito
Description: This digital rendering was used as an illustration for New York Times / Science Times cover article on survival strategies of various species during the winter months.
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| Title: Caribou
Contact: Chris Gralapp
Description: Male caribou in summer coat.
Created for the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History.
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| Title: Siberian Tiger (Panthera tigris)
Contact: Marjorie Leggitt
Description: Field sketch of tiger at the Denver Zoo
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| Title: Coyote
Contact: Carlyn Iverson
Description: The coyote, Canis latrans, is found throughout most of the United States. A carnivore, this mammal has adapted well to the expansion of the human population.
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| Title: Gopher Tortoise Burrow Ecology
Contact: John Norton
Description:
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| Title: Sea slug lateral swimming style
Contact: Melisa Beveridge
Description: This image was created in Photoshop to accompany an article about Sea Slug swimming syles in the May 2009 issue of Natural History Magazine.
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| Title: Human Gender Comparison
Contact: Diana Marques
Description: Comparison of male (left) and female human skulls from a frontal and side views. Commissioned by the Smithsonian Institution to use on the website of an exhibition of the Natural History Museum
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| Title: Carbon dating diagram
Contact: Alison Schroeer
Description: This scientific artwork of the carbon dating process was drawn by biological illustrator Alison Schroeer of Schroeer Scientific Illustration.
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| Title: Ear
Contact: Jane Whitney
Description: For a grade 8 student text. Shows the balance of air pressure on either side of the ear drum.
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| Title: Sciatica
Contact: William Hamilton
Description: Human vertebral section demonstrating a ruptured disc and pressure on nerve.
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| Title: All the Helpers in the Garden
Contact: MaryBeth Hinrichs
Description: Can you imagine all the helpers in the garden?
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| Title: Tick life cycle
Contact: Laurie O'Keefe
Description: General life cycle of the Black-legged tick (Ixodes scapularis), also known as the deer tick. 4 stages of development (egg, larva, nymph, adult) and 3 hosts occur over a 2 year cycle. A blood meal is necessary to progress to each successive stage of the life cycle. If a tick feeds on a small mammal (white-footed mouse) infected with Borrelia burgdorferi, a bacteria, it may reinfect its next carrier such as a deer, dog, or human, and transmit Lyme disease.
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| Title: Sagittal Female Pelvis
Contact: Travis Vermilye
Description: Sagittal Female Pelvis. Carbon Dust
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| Title: Coyotes
Contact: John Megahan
Description: Illustrations of coyotes for an educational text. Harcourt press.
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| Title: Forensic Sculpture
Contact: Chris Sanders
Description: Working with an anthropologist and the basic anatomy of the facial muscles the sculptures are developed using each individual's unique skeletal traits to reveal the appearance of the person as they would have looked in life. These study models represent closed cases.
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| Title: Brazilian Cerrado Habitat Group (1st detail)
Contact: Michael Rothman
Description: This is a large work depicting the diminishing Brazilian savanna habitat known as the "cerrado". A typical faunal representative is the endangered Maned Wolf (Chrysocyon brachyurus); typical, fire resistant floral representatives are the cashew (Anacardium occidentale, Salvertia convallariodora, and Solanum lycocarpum.)
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| Title: Fennec
Contact: Chris Gralapp
Description: The Fennec is an African desert fox which is well adapted to extremes temperatures. With huge ears and nocturnal habits, he spends the hottest part of the day underground in his cool burrow.
Created for the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History
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| Title: Superficial muscle groups, posterior view
Contact: Pam Little, CMI
Description: Superficial muscles of the upper and lower limbs and back.
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| Title: Back Exercise 1
Contact: Carlyn Iverson
Description: View of an exercise for the back, created digitally.
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| Title: Jumprope
Contact: Gail Guth
Description: Illustration for spelling wall cards set, ©Developmental Studies Center (devstu.org). Provides older readers with basic instruction in phoneme awareness, phonics, and sight words. Ink line and colored pencil.
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| Title: Stretching Positions
Contact: Diana Marques
Description: These and several other images were done to illustrate the muscles involved in different stretching positions and how they affect the human body.
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| Title: Maxillofacial surgery skull
Contact: Alison Schroeer
Description: This medical illustration was created by medical illustrator Alison Schroeer of Schroeer Scientific Illustration, as part of a maxillofacial surgery series. It depicts branches of the external carotid artery branching into and near the temporalis muscle.
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| Title: Fennec Fox
Contact: Katura Reynolds
Description: The fennec fox (Vulpes zerda) lives in the Sahara Desert. Its gigantic ears help it regulate its body temperature.
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| Title: Invitro Fertilization
Contact: Jane Whitney
Description: Illustration for a grade 9 science text book.
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| Title: Anterior view of human cruciate ligaments
Contact: William Hamilton
Description: Anterior view of human cruciate ligaments and related structures.
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| Title: Intestinal Vessels
Contact: Travis Vermilye
Description: Cadaver Sketch of Intestinal Vessels
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| Title: Deer
Contact: Emil Huston
Description:
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| Title: Brazilian Cerrado habitat group (2nd detail))
Contact: Michael Rothman
Description: This is a large work depicting the diminishing Brazilian savanna habitat known as the "cerrado". A typical faunal representative is the endangered Maned Wolf (Chrysocyon brachyurus); typical, fire resistant floral representatives are the cashew (Anacardium occidentale), Salvertia convallariodora, and Solanum lycocarpum.
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| Title: Tiger identification
Contact: Chris Sanders
Description: Panthera tigris altaica The facial markings as well as body stripes of tigers are unique to each individual and can be used for identification purposes. Siberian tigers Alexis (l) and Norma (r) reside at the Bronx Zoo in NYC. Siberian Tigers are the largest and heaviest subspecies. Females can measure up to 8 1/2’ and weigh 370 lbs. Acrylic on paper.
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| Title: Detail: Death Trawl
Contact: Frank Ippolito
Description: Cover Artwork for a New York Time / Science Times article on the effects of overfishing in the oceans of the world.
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| Title: Giant Anteater
Contact: Chris Gralapp
Description: The Giant Anteater raids termite mounds using his powerful claws and sticky tongue.
Created for the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History.
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| Title: Miacid
Contact: Laurie O'Keefe
Description: Miacids, squirrel sized carnivores, similar to modern day pine martens in appearance and behavior, appeared during the Paleocene (55mya). Traditional wash/photoshop image created for the Smithsonian-National Museum of Natural History/Behring Family Hall of Mammals
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| Title: Northwest Otters
Contact: John Megahan
Description: This is a line drawing of sea otters in the San Juan
Islands.
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| Title: Flying Fox
Contact: Theophilus Britt Griswold
Description: The largest species of the fruit bat family.
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| Title: Black tailed Jackrabbit
Contact: Carlyn Iverson
Description: The Black tailed Jackrabbit lives in the southwestern United States, including the Sonoran Desert. Built for the desert environment, this hare has very large ears and long legs.
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| Title: Female Reproductive Anatomy
Contact: Jane Whitney
Description: For a grade 6 human reproduction student text.
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| Title: North American Beaver habitat in Delaware
Contact: Michael Rothman
Description: The North American Beaver is depicted in a Mid-Atlantic State mixed hardwood forest habitat group. The work was commissioned by the Delaware Department of Natural Resources. Among the important elements in this acrylic painting are the Beaver's lodge and the widespread presence of Black tupelo (Nyssa sylvatica) and River birch (Betula nigra).
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| Title: Grizzly Bear
Contact: Amelia Hansen
Description: Watercolor portrait of a grizzly bear (Ursus arctos).
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| Title: Triacylglycerol and Cholesterol Transport
Contact: Elizabeth Morales
Description:
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| Title: Eastern Chipmunk
Contact: Consie Powell
Description: Ink and watercolor illustration of an eastern chipmunk (Tamius striatus) climbing a hazel bush to harvest the hazelnuts.
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| Title: Dolly Llama
Contact: Barbara Harmon
Description: ungulate, head on
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| Title: Cross section thorax and abdomen
Contact: Pam Little, CMI
Description: Diagrammatic anatomy of thorax and abdomen in cross section
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| Title: Human skeleton
Contact: Alison Schroeer
Description: This anatomical artwork of the anterior and posterior human skeleton has all bones labeled. This medical illustration was created by medical illustrator Alison Schroeer of Schroeer Scientific Illustration.
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| Title: Embryonic development in animals
Contact: Denise Wagner
Description: Computer painting of Embryonic development in animals
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| Title: Comparing Chimp-human Supralaryngeal Airway
Contact: Gail Guth
Description: Watercolor, colored pencil and digital illustration comparing chimpanzee and human supralaryngeal airways. Created for the textbook "Biological Anthropology: The Natural History of Humankind", by Craig Stanford, John S. Allen, and Susan C. Anton; published by Prentice Hall. Textbook art developed and managed by Precision Graphics, Inc.
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| Title: Glider
Contact: Chris Gralapp
Description: The glider is one of the few mammals that travels airborne. Specialized webbed mantles allow these mammals to glide from tree to tree. I have illustrated several different species.
Created for the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History
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| Title: Tony
Contact: Kathleen McKeehen
Description: Portrait
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| Title: Coyote Ridge Sign
Contact: Gary Raham
Description: Sign art and design for the City of Ft.
Collins natural area, Coyote Ridge.
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| Title: Milk Production-dairy
Contact: Laurie O'Keefe
Description: General overview of milk production in dairy cow. Airbrush illustration features the major organs involved in this process.
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| Title: Arm muscles, tendons; Leg skeleton, ligaments
Contact: Marjorie Leggitt
Description: Anatomical illustrations prepared for Denver Museum of Nature and Science - Expedition Health exhibit and educational materials
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