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posted Monday January 12, 2009 02:37pm EST

Around the Web: imagined evolution, a crucifish, and 15 cool space projects

Torie Atkinson

After Man: A Zoology of the Future - How fifty million years of (imaginary) evolution could shape life on this planet. Complete with illustrations of wondrous beasts, including the Rabbucks, the Wooly Gigantalope, and the Oakleaf Toad (shown here).

Conan the Designer: Redeeming an Icon - A great piece on the challenges of illustrating an iconic figure, inspired by the Tor.com posts on the same subject.

Crucifish - From the truth-is-weirder-than-fiction files (inspired by the recent Brian Slattery posts, perhaps?), a fish skull shaped like Jesus. No, really.

The Art of the Title: Edward Scissorhands - A great look at a beautiful title sequence.

Happy Birthday, HAL 9000 - Don’t kill us. Please? 

Also this day in history - In 1966 the Adam West Batman premiered.

The future is wild - A look at what the world could be like 5 million, 100 million, and 200 million years from now.

15 cool space projects for today and tomorrow - Complete with artist renderings and diagrams. Very cool indeed.

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categories: ...and Related Subjects
tags: around the web, after man: a zoology of the future, Conan, crucifish, edward scissorhands, hal 9000, don't kill us please, Adam West, Batman, the future, evolution, science, cool space projects

4 comments
Jason Henninger
1.  jasonhenninger
VIEW ALL BY · Monday January 12, 2009 02:57pm EST
Is that why Christians have fish symbols on their cars? Homage to Catholic catfish parts?
Irene Gallo
2.  Irene
VIEW ALL BY · Monday January 12, 2009 04:14pm EST
http://i4.photobucket.com/albums/y141/igallo/Album%202/BatmanColorforms-2.jpg

*Moment of silence to reflect on TV Batman*
J Dalziel
3.  BunnyM
VIEW ALL BY · Tuesday January 13, 2009 08:21am EST
*squeee!s*

Y'know, it's nice to see that I'm not one of three people on the planet that remember After Man. I still love it to bits, 25 years after I got my first copy.

Anyone who finds a copy in the stores, I really recommend it, it's well worth it for the art alone, let alone the interesting topic.
Jeff Soules
4.  DeepThought
VIEW ALL BY · Wednesday January 14, 2009 12:32pm EST
Seeing that book After Man plugged here reminded me of a book that I used to LOOOOVE as a child, talking about what kinds of dinosaur-based animals might have evolved if the meteor had missed... It was called The New Dinosaurs, though it just took me about twenty minutes of searching to find that.

...and on seeing it, I realized that the two were by the same author. How appropriate -- if the one reviewed here is anywhere near as good as the one I used to love, it would be a wonderful find indeed.
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