Didymium clavus by Barry Webb
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Didymium clavus by Barry Webb

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Found a little grove of slime mould sporangia coming up on cow dung & took a bit home to watch them develop. I think these might be Didymium squamulosum.
iNaturalist observation 326327003
If we turn back time, will we learn to live right?
Didymium clavus aka tiny cookies covered in powdered sugar
And here's a size reference of the specimen (they are the tiny white dots, if it's not obvious):
Here let us call a temporary halt and take a look at the rare earths that were known up to 1907. I will list them in the order of discovery:
Seventeen rare earths were discovered. To be sure, didymium disappeared from the list but that still leaves sixteen.
"The Stars in their Courses" - Isaac Asimov

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#1850 - Didymium sp. - Didymium Slime Mold
Found among leaf litter up at Jarrahdale, by some of the kids attending a fungi walk.Â
There’s almost twenty species of Didymium in Australia, but I have no idea how to tell them apart. At least six of them have been found in the Perth metropolitan area alone.Â
Didymium is one of the acellular or plasmodial slime molds, which start as microscopic individual cells hunting bacteria and other microorganisms, then form slimy amorphous organisms visible with the naked eye once they’ve exhausted their food supply then crawl off to form conspicuously shaped fruiting bodies as here. For single-celled organisms, they can reach immense sizes - the plasmodia in some species can be a meter across and weigh up to 20 kilograms.Â
Didymium is also a mixture of praseodymium and neodymium, originally mistaken for a discrete chemical element, that is used in lenses to block sodium light and some infrared wavelengths.Â
Summer Milky Way - The Pinnacles Desert, Western Australia
Nikon d5500 - 50mm - 22 x 30 seconds - ISO 4000 - f/2.8
New color changing earrings up on Etsy. This video demonstrates the color changing of didymium glass. Much like the gemstone Alexandrite,The rare earth elements neodymium and praseodymium when combined in glass produces this incredible property of changing color depending on if it’s exposed to incandescent or fluorescent light. https://etsy.me/2qLekQY #didymium #alexandriteglass #earringsoftheday #alexisberger https://www.instagram.com/p/BqI9EoyByoP/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=2ha1zn05rumv