Brighter inks, without pigment

Among the taxidermal specimens in Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology, past centuries-old fur coats, arises a flicker of brilliant blue. This is the spangled cotinga. Surprisingly, the cotinga is about as old as everything in the room, but its color is still as dazzling as the day it was brought to the museum. The cotinga-or rather its feathers-achieve this effect through structural color. A spangled cotinga, formerly on display at the Harvard Museum of Natural History. (Photo courtesy of Curious Expeditions/Flickr under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-SA 2. Unlike color that we usually think of, which arises from paints and dyes absorbing certain wavelengths of light and reflecting the remainder, structural color is created when an object's very nanostructure amplifies a specific wavelength.
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