
This specimen came to me for identification. It had been killed the previous day, after stinging a bee-sensitive person. The person's bad reaction had resolved well, but for future reference they wanted to be sure what the beast was. I could understand their needing some help with ID, because at the time the specimen was totally black and dripping with bug spray. It looked like some sort of gigantic monstrous thing of uncertain ancestry. But with enough magnification and a technical key, I was able to say that yes, it really was a bumblebee.
Then came the question of what to do with the corpse. Other than looking like black slime, the specimen seemed to still be in good condition. I cleaned it up with some solvents followed by a sonic bath in detergent and water, then dried it and brushed out some of the hairs.
After drying, I looked it over to see if there was anything especially interesting to photograph. I was surprised to see that the shiny black mandibles are largely covered with fine hairs, which in certain light turned the most wonderful golden color. That's what you're seeing here.
For context, here is a crossed eye stereo pair of the head and thorax. The view is looking "up" at the underside of the head.

Then working closer, shooting with a 10X objective...
A couple of crossed-eye stereo pairs...


And finally, a non-stereo crop from the first image...

All images except the whole head were made from a single stack, Nikon D800E in full-frame mode, 514 frames at 0.007 mm focus step, Mitutoyo 10X NA 0.28 M Plan Apo objective on Raynox DCR-150 tube lens so about 10.4X magnification. Illumination was with 3 Jansjö LEDs, diffused through two-ply Kleenex tissue. ISO 100, 2 seconds exposure. I actually shot 657 frames, but then truncated the stack in processing because I thought it looked better without some extraneous detail in far background. Slabbed using PMax, 25 frames per slab with 6 frames overlap, to simplify retouching and experiments. The finals shown here are also PMax, lightly retouched. There was too much overlapping structure, even with the slabbing, for DMap results to look good.
--Rik