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  • Animal with a large mouth filled with sharp teeth. On the floor of the mouth is a perpendicular protrusion. Early Tetrapod (Ichthyostega) Caption: such as this 370-million-year-old predator.

    Part of the "Branches on the Tree of Life" series. The phylum Chordata includes tunicates, sea lancelets, hagfish, and all familiar vertebrate animals. Explores how these seemingly diverse animals evolved and how the group is unified by four characteristic structures: a hollow dorsal nerve chord, a supportive notochord, gill slits, and a post-anal tail. Key milestones in vertebrate evolution include improvements in swimming and feeding, the evolution of paired fins and a primitive lung, movement onto the land, and the emergence of the amniotic egg.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Geometry of a Circle V1

    • Image
    • Text Document
    • PDF
    • 2.5D Tactile Graphic
    Multiple Diagrams illustrating four basic concepts of a circle. Terms include: circumference (distance around the whole circle), radius (distance from the center of the circle to the outer edge, diameter (the distance from the opposite point of the circle), and chord (the distance from any two points on the circle's edge).

    Diagram showing the geometry and terms used to describe a circle. Design modalities for the image include braille with and without labels, print with and without labels in greyscale, color, and texture.

    (Source: Benetech)

  • Geometry of a Circle V2

    • Image
    • Text Document
    • PDF
    • 2.5D Tactile Graphic
    Single Diagram illustrating four basic concepts of a circle. Terms include: circumference (distance around the whole circle), radius (distance from the center of the circle to the outer edge, diameter (the distance from the opposite point of the circle), and chord (the distance from any two points on the circle's edge).

    Diagram showing the geometry and terms used to describe a circle. Design modalities for the image include braille with and without labels, print with and without labels in greyscale, color, and texture.

    (Source: Benetech)

  • Person standing and holding a small object in their hand while facing a person who is sitting. Caption: in the patient's neck created by the laryngectomy.

    Speech, your means of communication, is the medium for exchanging ideas and expressing both pleasure and pain. Examines the physiology of speech by looking at humans' vocal tracts. Shows how the larynx, vocal chords, wind pipe, tongue, and lips produce the sounds of speech. Also, looks at the ability to understand speech by explaining why your ears and brain can discern the subtle nuances of rapid sounds.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Two line graphs with multiple overlapping, rising and falling lines. Graphs are labelled Reproducing Topoplot and Improvising Topolot. Caption: when professional musicians are playing composed music

    Georgia Tech's Parag Chordia believes music is a universal part of human culture, and his research shows music education can inspire greater interest in math, physics, and computer science. Chordia heads Georgia Tech's "Music Intelligence Group." With support from the National Science Foundation, his goals are to program computers to understand music and study the brains of professional musicians as they play composed music versus when they improvise.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Spherical animal with spiny protrusions. Caption: Spines are adapted for different habitats:

    Part of the "Branches on the Tree of Life" series. Echinoderms are one branch of the deuterostome line of animal evolution, the branch to which Chordates also belong. Covers phylum characteristics and key biological details for five classes: sea stars, brittle stars and basket stars, sea urchins and sand dollars (including developmental stages), sea cucumbers, and crinoids (feather stars).

    (Source: DCMP)