Mr. Josef Spacek
Charles University Hospital, Fingerland Department of Pathology
Hradec Kralove, Czech Republic
Specimen: Vessel architectonics of leaf of lime
Technique: Confocal
(Source: olympusbioscapes.com)
Mr. Josef Spacek
Charles University Hospital, Fingerland Department of Pathology
Hradec Kralove, Czech Republic
Specimen: Vessel architectonics of leaf of lime
Technique: Confocal
(Source: olympusbioscapes.com)
Dr. Albert Pan
Cambridge, MA, USA
Specimen: Zebrafish tail sensory axons
Technique: Confocal
(Source: olympusbioscapes.com)
Ms. Sylvia Schirmer
Institute of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Department of Reproductive Biology, Justus Liebig University
Giessen, Germany
Specimen: Cryo section of rat testis
Technique: Confocal
(Source: olympusbioscapes.com)
Dr. Dominik Paquet
Munich, Germany
Specimen: Tau-transgenic “Alzheimer”-Zebrafish
Technique: Confocal
(Source: olympusbioscapes.com)
Dr. Uma Ganesan
Fremont, CA, USA
Specimen: Tufted trichomes in oak leaf
Technique: Brightfield
(Source: olympusbioscapes.com)
Ms. Haruka Fujimaki
Bryant Pond, ME, USA
Specimen: Atlantic salmon embryos
Technique: Stereomicroscopy
(Source: olympusbioscapes.com)
Dr. David Domozych
Skidmore College, Department of Biology
Saratoga Springs, NY, USA
Specimen: Penium
Technique: Confocal
(Source: olympusbioscapes.com)
Mr. Spike Walker
Penkridge, UK
Specimen: Mandibles of a spider
Technique: Brightfield
(Source: olympusbioscapes.com)
Dr. Fabienne Poulain
University of Utah, Neurobiology and Anatomy
Salt Lake City, UT, USA
Specimen: Zebrafish embryo with retinal axons
Technique: Confocal
(Source: olympusbioscapes.com)
Mr. Ruben M. Sandoval
Indiana University School of Medicine/Nephrology
Indianapolis, IN, USA
Specimen: Intravital kidney image of a glomerulus
Technique: Multiphoton
(Source: olympusbioscapes.com)
Dr. Marco Antonio Ramírez
Gustavo A. Madero D.F., Mexico
Specimen: Shark parasite
Technique: Brightfield
(Source: olympusbioscapes.com)
This is a blog dedicated to sharing and compiling many different images from under the microscope. From living to non-living, we can appreciate the invention of the microscope that has allowed us to see the into world of the very small.