You can’t do this kind of time lapse on your iPhone. A University of Arizona professor is hoping to capture the changes of a Tucson landscape over the next thousand years, setting up a primitive ...
This story is free to read because readers choose to support LAist. If you find value in independent local reporting, make a donation to power our newsroom today. Technologically, the camera obscura, ...
Jonathon Keats wants to reshape the way we perceive time and our place in history. He's doing it with a decidedly low-tech tool: a pinhole camera placed on a mountainside in Tucson. His Millennium ...
What did the spot of land you’re currently on look like 1,000 years ago? Well, people in the year 3023 might have the luxury of finding out, thanks to an art/science project called the Millennium ...
No one knows exactly what will happen to Tucson or the desert surrounding it over the next 1,000 years, but a new art project on Tumamoc Hill could offer a pretty good snapshot someday. The Millennium ...
Researchers have used the centuries-old idea of pinhole imaging to create a high-performance mid-infrared imaging system without lenses. The new camera can capture extremely clear pictures over a ...
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