Photo Contest - Skeleton Crew (7/18-7/24)

  • Thread starter Thread starter ZapperZ
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    photo contest
AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers around a photo contest themed "Skeleton Crew," with specific rules for submissions. Participants can submit one digital photo relevant to the theme, adhering to size limitations and ensuring the photo is their own original work. Photos must be uploaded to a photo server or directly to the forum, and once submitted, they cannot be changed unless withdrawn. Voting will occur at the end of the contest, potentially across multiple threads if there are many entries. A participant shares a personal anecdote about their medical skeleton, named Archie, highlighting a memorable interaction between a young girl and a skeleton at a bookstore, reflecting on the curiosity and learning opportunities such encounters provide. The discussion emphasizes the charm of children's interactions with educational tools like medical skeletons.
ZapperZ
Staff Emeritus
Science Advisor
Homework Helper
Insights Author
Messages
32,814
Reaction score
4,725
Skeleton Crew

Let's see what you can do with that theme.

Contest Rules:


1. Any digital photo or digitally-scanned photo relevant to the theme will be accepted within the contest period. In case there's a gray area, or you're not sure if the picture is suitable, check with me first.

2. Size limitations: Your photo is only limited to the file size limitation set by PhysicsForums. However, your may want to consider reducing the size of your photo if the file size exceeds 1 Mb. If your file is being hosted elsewhere, I will have to see how it is being displayed here, and I may ask you to resize and resubmit if it causes problems.

3. Upload your photos to any of the photo servers such as imageshack or photobucket. Then post it the relevant contest thread and link your picture using the img command. PM me if you do not know how. Alternatively, you may simply upload your image file to PF, and then have the full image displayed in your post.

4. Only ONE picture per member per contest. Once a picture is posted, it cannot be changed other than a total withdrawal by that member from that week's photo contest. Exceptions will be made for modification to comply with the rules, such as resizing.

5. At the end of the contest period, I will open a poll and every PF member can vote for the picture they like best.

6. Note that in case we have a large number of entries, I will do the polling in more than one thread. If that's the case, you can vote in each of the polling threads. The photos will be assigned in the polling threads in the order they were submitted.

7. The photo of the subject must be something that you took directly, not via in intermediary medium, and not taken by someone else. Unless otherwise noted, a photo of another photo, painting, print, etc. does not qualify.

8. You can use a picture only once. Once it is used in a contest, it cannot be reused in another contest.

9. Please post only pictures meant for submission in this thread. Photos not meant for submission must not be posted in the contest thread. Posting of more than one photos by a member may result in an automatic disqualification from the week's contest.

Zz.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
blue bones.jpg
 
  • Like
Likes jtbell, DennisN, DaveE and 7 others
img-720000456.jpg
 
  • Like
Likes david2, berkeman, rsk and 1 other person
DSC_3628 copy.jpg
 
  • Like
  • Wow
Likes david2, jtbell, DennisN and 6 others
IMG_3843.JPG

Zz.
 
  • Like
Likes davenn, david2 and BillTre
The skeleton in a Morgue I often go to.

2020-07-22_03-36-27.jpg
 
  • Like
Likes davenn, berkeman, DennisN and 1 other person
Looks like he's been injecting bleach into one of his thighs.
 
  • Haha
  • Like
Likes davenn, Wrichik Basu, david2 and 1 other person
Maybe that's why he's in the morgue.
 
  • Like
  • Haha
Likes davenn, Wrichik Basu, david2 and 2 others
This is "Archie", my 1/2 scale medical skeleton that I've used over the years to help me in my anatomy classes and also in some of my EMS cases that I want to learn more about. My wife and I often dress him up for special occasions, and this is his Christmas outfit from a few years ago.

One of the best moments I've ever experienced with medical skeletons came about 10 years ago in the Stanford Book Store (back when they still carried medical student supplies), when I saw a wonderful interaction with a little 5 y/o girl and a 1/2 scale medical skeleton like Archie. I wish I had a picture of this moment, but basically I turned around in the medical student section of the bookstore and saw this little girl who was the same height as the medical skeleton, and she was standing right in front of it mesmerized by it.

She was not moving, just studying the skeleton, and I noticed that her young parents were standing nearby but also just letting her explore. What an amazing juxtaposition, with a curious little girl standing toe to toe with a half size medical skeleton that was her same size. I wonder what was going through her mind right then... :smile:
Archie dressed up for Xmas (2).jpg
 
  • Like
Likes davenn, fresh_42 and BillTre
  • #10
At the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science in Albuquerque.

7823B1C6-BAF2-4481-84B7-FE3F7C004594.jpeg


(On that trip, we made a right turn, not a left turn, at "Albakoikee". :wink:)
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes BillTre
  • #11
Final day to submit your photo for this contest.

Zz.
 
  • #12
DSCF1009.JPG


An antique, though not prehistoric. No fossil like an old fossil!
 
  • Like
Likes Rubidium_71, BillTre and berkeman
  • #13
berkeman said:
What an amazing juxtaposition, with a curious little girl standing toe to toe with a half size medical skeleton that was her same size.
Kids are very cute when you can almost hear their brains ticking away. It would also have been interesting to see how different their body proportions were. Children have over-sized heads compared to adults, so if the skeleton were standing flat-footed with the crown of its head at the same height as hers, its collar bone and pelvis should have been higher than hers.
 
  • Like
Likes BillTre and berkeman

Similar threads

Replies
10
Views
2K
Replies
13
Views
2K
Replies
15
Views
2K
Replies
31
Views
5K
Replies
21
Views
3K
Replies
30
Views
3K
Replies
19
Views
2K
Back
Top