You want to give your pet every advantage it can get, right? But armor?
For 36 years, artist Jeff de Boer has made armor for cats and mice—a wildly popular niche—but he doesn’t count on the animals actually morphing into mini-medieval warriors. Rather, his museum-quality work, such as the “samurai” cat armor shown above, jolts people’s imagination and calls forth the hero in underdogs.
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Intricate: Most of the animal armor is fashioned from 50 to 300 separate pieces, including tiny rivets. What inspired the artist? For one, Walt Disney, he responded. Like Walt, “It all started with a mouse.” Read more.
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PHOTOGRAPH BY STEVE GSCHMEISSNER, SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
Where is this strange alien material? See that colorful rock (above)? It came from outer space—and crashed to Earth in 1751. It became the foundation of the world’s oldest meteorite collection, with a pattern (seen on this slice) of iron-nickel crystals unique to meteorites. Where is this rock now? Click here to find out.
LEFT: IMAGE BY NASA, ESA, CSA, STSCI; IMAGE PROCESSING: JOSEPH DEPASQUALE (STSCI), ALYSSA PAGAN (STSCI); RIGHT: IMAGE BY NASA, ESA, CSA, STSCI; IMAGE PROCESSING: JOSEPH DEPASQUALE (STSCI), ANTON M. KOEKEMOER (STSCI), ALYSSA PAGAN (STSCI)
Behind the dust: The world’s most powerful space telescope is piercing through the cosmic dust that shrouded much of the universe, leaving scientists in awe. Normally, the interstellar dust is “like being in a smoky room,” says Jane Rigby, the operations project scientist with the James Webb Space Telescope. But infrared light (capturing a thunderstorm of gas and dust, above left) is the key to this breakthrough, Nat Geo reports. (Above right, another Webb camera peers nearly formed stars in and behind the Pillars of Creation region in the Eagle Nebula.)
This newsletter was curated and edited by David Beard, Sydney Combs, and Jen Tse. Do you have an idea or a link for the newsletter? Let us know at david.beard@natgeo.com. If you want our daily newsletter, sign up here. Have a good weekend ahead.
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