Biomapper is a kit of GIS and statistical tools designed to build habitat suitability (HS) models and maps for organisms. It is based on the Ecological Niche Factor Analysis (ENFA) which enables HS models to be created without requiring absence data (e.g., data documenting locations where the organism is not present). ENFA determines which e ...
Last Update: 2009
Data analysis Species populations
Login to add the tool into your favorites.
The industry is finally waking up to a basic demographic reality: Women over 60 subscribe to streamers. We have disposable income, cultural influence, and a desperate hunger to see our own complexities reflected on screen. From "Character Actress" to Leading Lady We need to retire the term "character actress" when referring to women over 50. Historically, it was a polite way of saying, "She’s too interesting or too old to be the love interest."
We aren't just surviving in Hollywood anymore. We are leading the charge. Let’s look at the evidence. In 2023, The Lost King gave us Sally Hawkins as a complex, obsessive everywoman. Nyad featured Annette Bening (64) and Jodie Foster (60) portraying endurance, trauma, and triumph without a drop of filler-magazine gloss. On the television side, The Morning Show pits Jennifer Aniston and Reese Witherspoon against each other—not over a man, but over power, legacy, and journalistic integrity.
Who is your favorite mature actress crushing it right now? Drop a comment below. Let’s celebrate the women who refuse to fade away.
Look at the renaissance of Jamie Lee Curtis. After decades of being a "scream queen" and a comedic foil, she won an Oscar for Everything Everywhere All at Once at 64—playing a frumpy, depressed, tax-auditing mother who saves the multiverse. She wasn't glamorous. She was real. And we adored her.
These roles aren't side dishes. They are the main course.
The industry is finally waking up to a basic demographic reality: Women over 60 subscribe to streamers. We have disposable income, cultural influence, and a desperate hunger to see our own complexities reflected on screen. From "Character Actress" to Leading Lady We need to retire the term "character actress" when referring to women over 50. Historically, it was a polite way of saying, "She’s too interesting or too old to be the love interest."
We aren't just surviving in Hollywood anymore. We are leading the charge. Let’s look at the evidence. In 2023, The Lost King gave us Sally Hawkins as a complex, obsessive everywoman. Nyad featured Annette Bening (64) and Jodie Foster (60) portraying endurance, trauma, and triumph without a drop of filler-magazine gloss. On the television side, The Morning Show pits Jennifer Aniston and Reese Witherspoon against each other—not over a man, but over power, legacy, and journalistic integrity. BadMilfs - Kat Marie - Curiosity Gets You Spitr...
Who is your favorite mature actress crushing it right now? Drop a comment below. Let’s celebrate the women who refuse to fade away. The industry is finally waking up to a
Look at the renaissance of Jamie Lee Curtis. After decades of being a "scream queen" and a comedic foil, she won an Oscar for Everything Everywhere All at Once at 64—playing a frumpy, depressed, tax-auditing mother who saves the multiverse. She wasn't glamorous. She was real. And we adored her. Historically, it was a polite way of saying,
These roles aren't side dishes. They are the main course.