Smithsonian researchers and a photographer placed “biocubes” in a bunch of different locations around the world to document what creatures and general life passed through them in a typical day. They ...
The exhibition “Life in One Cubic Foot” follows the research of Smithsonian scientists and photographer David Liittschwager as they discover what a cubic foot of land or water—a biocube—reveals about ...
Design files for the Biocube 29 nano reef tank build & support systems - GitHub - MKme/Aquarium: Design files for the Biocube 29 nano reef tank build & support systems ...
A biocube placed on the Tamae Reef off the Pacific island of Mo’orea (© David Liittschwager, all images courtesy Smithsonian Institution unless otherwise noted) A biocube in place at the Hallett ...
“There is more life in one cubic foot than anyone could look at in a month,” says photographer David Liittschwager. And he should know—he’s become famous for carting a green cube around the globe, one ...
Photographer David Liittschwager slowly snorkeled his way across jagged coral in a shallow lagoon of the island of Mo'ore'a, ten miles from Tahiti. Colorful riots of tropical fish scattered as he ...
A selection of reef creatures from Mo’orea, French Polynesia, revealed through inventorying one cubic foot from a reef off the coast of the Pacific island ...