Volume III:

This is an extended version of the original image, with another 25 figures included. Why not just the new guys? Because they're a collection, and collections belong on the same shelf.I've created a FAQ page so I don't have to clutter the comments up with too much TL;DR. Please take the time to read. You can find it here: heroesofscience.colonpipe.com/ The most frequently asked ones:Darwin? - No, wasn't alive in the 20th century.So few women? - Read the FAQ page, please. Too much 'splaining.Can I buy them? Can I buy a poster? - No. I will not be selling anything relating to this image. I have no intention of making any money from it.A few notes on specific scientists, and a roll call of the new ones:Albert Einstein:Now with dice!Erwin Schrödinger:Now with cat! Maybe.Gerard Kuiper:The Kuiper Belt is named after him. He has cool glasses.James Van Allen:Another man with belts named after him: this time the Van Allen Radiation Belts. I like his tie.Neil deGrasse Tyson:Now with celestial vest, as per a suggestion from Reddit.Hans Geiger:Famous for the geiger counter for measuring radiation.Lise Meitner:Contributed to the discovery of nuclear fission.Kurt Gödel:Mathematician with cool hair.Henri Poincaré:Extremely prolific mathematician, and one of the earliest individuals on here.Bertrand Russell:May include teapot, if it exists.Rosalind Franklin:One of the discoverers of the structure of DNA.Watson & Crick:Credited with discovery of DNA structure. Probably didn't wear ties with the DNA double helix on them, though.Ian Wilmut:Team leader of the group responsible for turning one sheep into two. Includes sheep -- not sure if it's the clone or not.Isaac Asimov:Author of eleventy squillion sci-fi books, postulator of a bunch of things, and a biochemistry professor in whatever time he had to spare.Noam Chomsky:Linguist, philosopher and many other things. He may have the coolest name on here.Brian Cox:Band member, TV personality and particle physicist.Bill Nye:OMG ITS THE SCIENCE GUYKarl Kruszelnicki:One of my personal heroes of science -- and a big fan of the uterus!Adam Savage and Jamie Hyneman:Bringing science to the masses is important, and as far as I'm concerned it deserves you the title of "Hero of Science". Adam and Jamie have been making people interested in science when they otherwise wouldn't care, and for that, I salute them.John Tuzo Wilson:I feel the Earth move -- he came up with the idea of plate tectonics.Robert Bakker:He shook up the palaeontology world by pushing the ideas of warm blooded giant reptiles, and dinosaurs that grew feathers and stuck around.Jack Horner:Discovered Maiasaura and their parenting habits, and was the inspiration for Dr. Alan Grant from Jurassic Park.Ivan Pavlov:Researcher into animal behaviour, famous for conditioned responses in dogs (and virtually everything else, by extension). Includes salivating dog.Jane Goodall:The only human ever to be accepted into a colony of chimpanzees, thus able to learn all sorts of things about their behaviour. Includes David Greybeard, the chimpanzee.George Washington Carver:Agricultural techniques, 300 uses for peanuts (!), awesome moustache. One of the 300 uses is allegedly peanut butter, although it gained popularity independently. Anyone who invents peanut butter is my hero, hands down.Linus Pauling:Chemist and peace activitist, and wearer of a mean beret.The names and images of the people in this graphic are the property (and in many cases trademarks) of the individuals or the estates that represent them. The original action figures were designed by Playmates Toys. The animals are from a pack of plastic farm and zoo animals from a dollar store, heavily modified. This image was not endorsed by any of the individuals or estates of individuals depicted, nor Playmates Toys. This image is intended strictly for educational and entertainment purposes.iPad and iPhone users: if you're using one of these devices, I've only recently learned that they have an aversion to really large images, and actually shrink them down to save on memory. This image is really big, so you will probably need to view it on a computer to read the text properly and see a the details. Sorry! Blame Apple.