The month’s sharpest science shots — selected by Nature’s photo team.

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The month’s sharpest science shots — selected by Nature’s photo team.
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The Tonga volcano eruption seen from space, a giant sea dragon and the snow-covered Sahara – check out the month’s sharpest science shots, selected by our photo team

Pristimantis gretathunbergae

on Mount Chucantí, which is part of an isolated mountain range in eastern Panama surrounded by tropical rainforest. Its black eyes are unique among Central American rain frogs, and its closest relatives are found in northwestern Colombia. The non-profit organization Rainforest Trust ran a charity auction to name the species — the winnerfor her work highlighting the urgency of preventing climate change.

ESO; Th. Stanke; J. Emerson/VISTA. Acknowledgement: Cambridge Astronomical Survey Unit; Digitized Sky Survey 2. Acknowledgment: Davide De Martin. This video has no sound. ESO; Th. Stanke; J. Emerson/VISTA. Acknowledgement: Cambridge Astronomical Survey Unit; Digitized Sky Survey 2. Acknowledgment: Davide De Martin. This video has no sound.— a massive star-forming area in the constellation of Orion, around 475 parsecs away — using images taken at various wavelengths by several telescopes. The large, fiery-looking structure on the left is the Flame Nebula, a ball of dust and ionized gas with a cluster of newly formed stars at its centre.

This collection of stem cells comes from a person with albinism — a condition that affects pigmentation in the eyes, skin and hair. The colours represent the dyes that label various proteins and structures in the cells . Researchers used cells such as these to develop an

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