Photography Contest IX

Polish your lenses again, oil your tripods (but not your shutters), search your archives (and, if you have entered before, remember that you are not limited to 3 good pictures per lifetime). The ninth Panda’s Thumb photography contest, begins – now!

Stereoscope

Stereoscope invented by Oliver Wendell Holmes. Mont Saint-Michel looks a little different today.

We will accept entries from 12:00 MDT (11:00 MST), July 5, through 12:00 MDT (11:00 MST), July 19. Mountain Daylight Time is 6 h earlier than UTC(GMT).

We encourage entries in a single, general category, which includes pictures of just about anything of scientific interest: any object of experimentation or observation, from single-celled organisms, through nematodes, fruit flies, rats, chimpanzees, and college sophomores to volcanoes, stars, and galaxies. In order not to omit theoreticians, we will consider computer-generated pictures and also photographs of equipment. Photomicrographs and electron micrographs are likewise welcomed.

Prizes will include a signed copy of Why Evolution Works (and Creationism Fails), by Matt Young and Paul Strode, which has been donated by one of the authors; and Sahotra Sarkar’s Doubting Darwin? Creationist Designs on Evolution, which has been generously donated by the National Center for Science Education.

If we get enough entries, consistently with Rules 11 and 12, we may add categories and award additional prizes, presuming, of course, that we can find more prizes.

The rules of the contest are simple:

  1. We will consider any photograph that displays scientific interest – biological, paleontological, geological, or astronomical, for example.
  2. Submit photographs in JPEG format.
  3. Reduce photographs to an information content of 600 pixels horizontally. If creationists require a definition of information, they may apply in writing to the management.
  4. Photographs may be enhanced but may not be montages. High dynamic range photographs are, however, accepted.
  5. Submit a maximum of 3 photographs (or 5 photographs per family) between 12:00 MDT, July 5, and 12:00 MDT, July 17, to thousandwords@pandasthumb.org. MDT = UTC(GMT) – 5 h.
  6. Submit the photographs as attachments to an e-mail (not embedded in the body of the e-mail). The subject line to the e-mail must have the form YourLastName_PhotographyContest. The filenames for the photographs must have the form YourLastName.Descriptor as, for example, Young.Oxytropis_sericea or Young.Table_Mountain, as appropriate.
  7. In your e-mail, identify the subject of the photograph: common and biological name, mineral type, or geological formation, for example. Provide a link that will allow a reader to learn more about the subject.
  8. Depending on the number of photographs submitted, we may post the best submissions and ask our readers to vote for the best photograph. Likewise, we may establish several categories with separate entries and separate ballots. In particular, students 16 and under should so identify themselves; if we receive enough entries, we will establish a student category.
  9. By submitting a photograph, you stipulate that you are the owner of the copyright and grant The Panda's Thumb a nonexclusive license to publish the photograph on its blog. The photograph will be subject to a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivatives license.
  10. Regular contributors to The Panda's Thumb are not eligible to enter the contest.
  11. The decision of the judges is irrevocable. The judges remain irrepressibly and irreducibly irascible, irreverent, and irredeemable, irregardless and irrespective.
  12. Even though we are getting better at running contests, we reserve the right to change any of the rules, or add or subtract rules at any time at our discretion.

Reed Cartwright contributed to this post.