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Atmospheric CO2 concentration art

No time to waste: Globally averaged concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere for the time period 803’719 BCE – today.

No time to waste: Globally averaged concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere for the time period 803’719 BCE – today. Not only the level of CO2 in the atmosphere matters, but also the rate at which it has changed: It took us a matter of decades to achieve larger changes than previous ones, which occurred over centuries or even thousands of years. This gives species, planetary systems, and ecosystems much less time to adapt. Artwork is based on the data visualisation from s-ink.org/atmospheric-co2-concentration.

  • Creators: Lucía Pérez Díaz and Fabio Crameri
  • This version: 23.03.2023
  • License: Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0)
  • Specific citation: This artwork by Lucía Pérez Díaz and Fabio Crameri is available via the open-access s-Ink.org repository.
  • Related reference: Bereiter, B., Eggleston, S., Schmitt, J., Nehrbass‐Ahles, C., Stocker, T. F., Fischer, H., … & Chappellaz, J. (2015). Revision of the EPICA Dome C CO2 record from 800 to 600 kyr before present. Geophysical Research Letters, 42(2), 542-549.
  • Vector-format version
  • Colour-vision deficiency friendly
  • Readable in black&white

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Planetary spheres art

100-km depth contours outline the basic radial compositional structure of the planetary interiors of Earth, Mars, Venus, and Mercury.

No time to visit: 100-km depth contours outline the basic radial compositional structure of the planetary interiors of Earth, Mars, Venus, and Mercury. To know about their interiors, one has to do measurements in their vicinity. If you want to travel there – and land –, it takes some serious time, mainly to adjust your space ship to the body’s particular orbital speed: To travel and land on Mars around 7 months, on Venus about 15 months, and on Mercury a whopping 6.5 years. Artwork is based on the data visualisation from s-ink.org/planetary-spheres.

  • Vector-format version
  • Colour-vision deficiency friendly
  • Readable in black&white

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Surface topography cross-section art

The global bedrock relief model of the Earth’s surface along the equator integrating land topography and ocean bathymetry reveals the vastness of the ocean depths.

No time to dive: The global bedrock relief model of the Earth’s surface along the equator integrating land topography and ocean bathymetry reveals the vastness of the ocean depths. Seeing the vastness of our global ocean that spans more than 70% of the planet’s surface, and hosts about 94% of wildlife, makes it clear why more than 80% has never been mapped, explored, or even seen by humans. Artwork is based on the data visualisation from s-ink.org/surface-topography-cross-section.

  • Vector-format version
  • Colour-vision deficiency friendly
  • Readable in black&white

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‘Betterposter’ poster template

Templates for the ‘Betterposter’ poster design by Mike Morrison to effectively create effective scientific posters.

Templates for the Betterposter poster design by Mike Morrison to effectively create effective scientific posters.

  • Adjustable .pptx template
  • Adjustable .keynote template
  • Colour-vision deficiency friendly
  • Readable in black&white

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Scientific colour map poster

A poster to be put in coffee, printer, and similar rooms at work acting as a gentle reminder for a professional use of colour in science communication.

A poster to remind for a professional, fair, and inclusive use of colour in science communication to display in coffee, printer, and similar rooms at work. Examples shown are for the unscientific rainbow colour map, ‘jet‘, and the scientific colour map ‘batlow‘ and features a photograph by Henry Manuel of Marie Skłodowska-Curie.

  • Printable pdf format
  • Colour-vision deficiency friendly
  • Readable in black&white

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