Tumgik
#paper nautilus
herpsandbirds · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media
Brown Paper Nautilus aka Winged Argonaut (Argonauta hians), riding a jellyfish, family Argonautidae, Anilao Janao Bay, Philippines
photograph by Dennis Corpuz
286 notes · View notes
meldrumart · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Various merms from over the years.
old and a little rough, but I still like em
232 notes · View notes
vintagewildlife · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Paper nautilus By: Neville Coleman From: The Complete Encyclopedia of the Animal World 1980
77 notes · View notes
sitting-on-me-bum · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
A paper nautilus (Argonauta spp.) attached to a piece of jellyfish on Ningaloo Reef in Exmouth, Western Australia.
Image credit: Jess Hadden
90 notes · View notes
emmaklee · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media
paper nautilus
ph Jeffrey R. Farmer
16 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Cooking something
23 notes · View notes
ketrinadrawsalot · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
Octo-ber #5: The Greater Argonaut and its kin are also known as paper nautiluses due to the thin "shell" that the females occupy. They are found worldwide in tropical and subtropical seas.
68 notes · View notes
squephalopod · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Argonauta argo
gastric emptying girlboss
20 notes · View notes
honkifex · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media
i gave the shell animal a name and ref i like it its silly and its short as fuck
15 notes · View notes
publiccollectors · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Providence! I'm having an exhibit and I'm coming to your city for a quick visit this week. It would be great to meet you at Paper Nautilus on Thursday night. Jan 19, 2023, 6-8 PM!
Protest Grim Reapers Archival Press Photos from Public Collectors
On view Jan 19 – Feb 28, 2023 Reception Jan 19, 6-8pm Paper Nautilus Books, Wayland Square 19 South Angell Street, Providence, RI, 02906
The Public Collectors project Protest Grim Reapers is a dive into the world of discarded and resold press photo archives. This exhibit reproduces details from 27 press photos of the famed Pale Horse rider, spanning from the late 1960s to the early 1990s. Across six of New England’s coldest weeks, we’ll get cozy with the documented personification of death in a neighborhood bookshop. From the back cover of the book that accompanies this collection: The grim reaper is an enduring figure at demonstrations. The reaper—or sometimes simply an angel of death—appears at protests for any cause where the gravity of a death figure feels appropriate. The reaper traditionally carries a scythe and wears a black hood and a skull mask or skull face paint, but sometimes the scythe is replaced with a different symbolic object.  For the past four years I have been collecting press photos of grim reapers at protests against hunger, radioactive waste, animal abuse, the death penalty, the Vietnam war, the closing of a Chrysler plant, demands for clean air and water, restrictions on abortion and more. These older press photos are routinely sold on the secondary market by dealers that acquire the archives of newspapers, or others that have purged their file copies. The dates of these photos reflect the availability of darkroom prints and wirephotos, taken before digital photography became dominant at most news outlets.  In recent years, the grim reaper has been in the news when people wearing this costume attended protests against keeping beaches and schools open during the COVID-19 pandemic. In general, the reaper tells spectators: ‘I am here because this is a matter or life or death for someone or something. I don’t want to be here, but because of you, your corporation, your politicians, or your crimes against humanity, my presence is justified. If this wasn’t deadly serious, I would have stayed at home or worn something else.’  — Marc Fischer / Public Collectors
Marc Fischer is the administrator of Public Collectors, an initiative he formed in 2007. Public Collectors aims to encourage greater access and scholarship for marginal cultural materials, particularly those that museums ignore. Public Collectors’ work includes the Library Excavations publication series and web project, Quaranzine—which produced 100 single page publications with over 75 collaborators at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, and Malachi Ritscher—a project about the late Chicago music documentarian and activist, produced for the 2014 Whitney Biennial. In addition to Public Collectors, Fischer is also a member of the group Temporary Services (founded in 1998) and a partner in its publishing imprint Half Letter Press (ongoing since 2008). He is based in Chicago. www.publiccollectors.org
25 notes · View notes
faantasizee · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
18 notes · View notes
wilbertgg · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
The twin pseudo legendaries of South Kalos, and the last non-legendaries of the leak. However I want to do some crossgens before i start the collage, one came to me in a dream one night... || The Ryunagi Line || The Takyomi Line || Make sure to check these links out before you go! Please...?
-Twitter-
-Tumblr-
-DeviantArt-
-Newgrounds-
-FurAffinity-
7 notes · View notes
ilikevintagebooks · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
The Paper Nautilus
-Chatterbox Book of Wild Animals 1909
6 notes · View notes
Link
like the lines in the mane of   a Parthenon horse,   round which the arms had wound themselves as if they knew love   is the only fortress   strong enough to trust to.
2 notes · View notes
sitting-on-me-bum · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
The shell of a paper nautilus washed up on a beach in Esperance, Southern Australia.
Australian Geographic
69 notes · View notes
dailycephalopods · 10 months
Note
Paper Nautilus? Those boys are lovely and I feel like they're SO underrated
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Daily Cephalopod #6
These are Argonauts! (Also nicknamed The Paper Nautilus)
To spread some Argonaut love, here's some cool facts!
The females grow much larger than males (about 8 times larger) and they produce a thin eggcase, or their "shell"
Females can mate and reproduce multiple times in their life, while the males only mate once and die shortly after
The males mate by removing their hectocotyl arm, which is then stored in the females eggcase!
The hectocotylus is the modified tentacle on male cepholpods that is used for mating and it was first discovered on an argonaut! (although it was originally misidentified as a parasitic worm attached to the mantle of the female it was discovered on)
The nickname 'Paper Nautilus' is quite misleading, because Argonauts are actually octopuses!
Argonauts have often been observed floating with/on salps, jellyfish, plant debris, driftwood, and even other argonauts at all stages of life!
Argonauts do not reside near the sea floor, they tend to drift closer to the surface and are the only known pelagic octopus!
Like many other octopuses, they have ink, they can change color, and they have venom!
254 notes · View notes