‘A Martian landscape on Earth’: 10 best images from the Royal Society Publishing Photography Competition
Also features alien slime, a crystal forest and a jellyfish elevator.
By James Cutmore
Published: Wednesday, 06 December 2023 at 08:00 AM
Fancy visiting an alien world? Well, Mars, one of our closest celestial neighbours, is roughly a staggering 225 million kilometres away from Earth – a journey that would take you over 1,000 years to walk.
But don’t go reaching for your space boots just yet: there’s plenty on planet Earth that looks truly Martian. At least, that’s what we can tell from the winner of this year’s Royal Society Publishing Photography Competition. While it looks like a picture of extra-terrestrial plants, it actually shows a cluster of smile moulds growing in a leafy garden in the United Kingdom (see image below).
But it’s not the only staggering photo in this collection, which documents strange scientific phenomena. Scroll down below to see a real-life crystal forest, a temporal crack, and a jellyfish elevator.
Ecology category runner-up – Post-war chamois
Microimaging category runner-up – Beacon of crystals in a wild forest
Astronomy category winner – The western veil nebula
Earth science category runner-up – A crack in time
Ecology category winner – Star of the night
Astronomy category runner-up – Flower Moon on a cloudy night
Behaviour category runner-up – Ssstandoff
Behaviour category winner – Nightly elevator
Earth science category runner-up – Burning through the frozen south