<p>That’s … interesting.</p>
<p>That would be awkward.</p>
<p>Maybe I’ll just do a virus. I can’t find any sufficient close-up pictures!</p>
<p>Moodrets: Are you serious? Why would someone do that?</p>
<p>it was on his facebook</p>
<p>so I’m thinking yes</p>
<p>Why does the name of the virus have to be directly under its picture? Now I can’t use those.</p>
<p>Well, that’s unfortunate for him.</p>
<p>Warts, what precisely is the point of a picture of a virus without its name? What do you need the picture for?</p>
<p>I need it for my biology club.</p>
<p>It’s my turn to make a mystery picture and formulate clues that correspond to it. I was going to do an animal but I think I’ll just do a virus like the person before me.</p>
<p>Ooh, do an SEM of a cell surface freeze fracture. Or there’s a famous picture of a bunch of bacteriophages on the membrane of an E. coli, which is really cool.</p>
<p>Or there are plenty of weird fish that live near the bottom of the sea. Maybe a flounder, sea horse/dragon (?) or something camoflage. Yeah, do camoflage.</p>
<p>I could do that, but I need to formulate clues that can help people identify what it is.</p>
<p>The person before me did adenovirus.</p>
<p>So much for individuality ;)</p>
<p>Do you present the clues with the pictures? Or before?</p>
<p>Because for the sea horse, you could say something like, very romantic.</p>
<p>And I wouldn’t want to adopt an adenovirus. Or a retrovirus. HIV is a retrovirus.
Look up pics of bacteriophages. They’re awesome.</p>
<p>Well, I’d post it on a website, so the clues and pictures would be on one page. Maybe I could do a sea horse and try to make some romantic poem that corresponds with it? I’m not sure if the people in the club would get it though.</p>
<p>How do you link to pictures on here?? I have a good pic of lambda.</p>
<p>Whoa, Wartsy, Biology Club? That sounds so cool.</p>
<p>You should make them guess random protists. Those look amazingly awesome. lol And there are pretty pictures of them too.</p>
<p>You just copy the shortcut and past it.</p>
<p>I’ll look into that, thanks!</p>
<p><a href=“http://scienceprofonline.googlepages.com/BacteriaBacteriophage2.jpg/BacteriaBacteriophage2-full;init:.jpg[/url]”>http://scienceprofonline.googlepages.com/BacteriaBacteriophage2.jpg/BacteriaBacteriophage2-full;init:.jpg</a>
Picture of a phage-infested bacterium.</p>
<p>[Diatom</a> Frustule 2](<a href=“http://www.astrographics.com/GalleryPrintsIndex/GP2131.html]Diatom”>http://www.astrographics.com/GalleryPrintsIndex/GP2131.html)
Picture of a diatom. Not sure how you would get it though…zoom in in the browser and prntscrn ;)</p>
<p>Wow biology club</p>
<p>that sounds so bad</p>
<p>phage sounds like it’s not a good word but maybe it is idk </p>
<p>like, I’m not a bio person, but some people could like biology I guess I just don’t lol haha … yeah</p>
<p>(Bacterio)phages are viruses that infect bacteria. Bad for E. coli, good for science.</p>
<p>Ok, thanks! I’ll try to zoom in on it. </p>
<p>TCBH, what do you mean? I’m not complaining, I like it:)</p>
<p>haha I guess E. coli isn’t science then haha logic haha i guess idk what it’s called lol</p>