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Mono Chrome Collection (page 7)

"Mono Chrome: A Journey through Time and Art" Step into a world where shades of black and white intertwine, revealing the essence of history, science, and art

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Naked pregnant women

Naked pregnant women
Naked pregnant woman at full term

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Anatomical position, artwork

Anatomical position, artwork
Anatomical position, computer artwork. In the anatomical position the body is standing, with the feet together and arms to the side. The head, eyes and palms are facing forwards

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Film Poster for Roman Polanskis Knife in Water (1962)

Film Poster for Roman Polanskis Knife in Water (1962)
Noz w wodzie

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: England, Tyne & Wear, Tynemouth

England, Tyne & Wear, Tynemouth. View looking south from headland near Cullercoats towards the Mouth of the Tyne and Tynemouth Priory

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: England, North Yorkshire, York City

England, North Yorkshire, York City. Grand tree with the equally grand York Minster Cathedral in the distance, with a street busker playing a piano at night

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Ostrich skeleton

Ostrich skeleton. Coloured x-ray of an ostrich (Struthio camelus). This bird is native to Africa and it is the largest species of bird

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Chernushka, Soviet space dog

Chernushka, Soviet space dog. Photographed on 11 March 1961, two days after Chernushka (" Blackie" ) had made an orbit of the Earth in the Sputnik 9 spacecraft on 9 March 1961

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Naked woman bending over

Naked woman bending over
MODEL RELEASED. Naked woman bending over

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Adult human skull

Adult human skull. Side view X-ray showing the cranium, eye socket, nasal area and teeth. For an X-ray of a babys skull see image P120/223 and for an X-ray of a childs skull see image number P120/224

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Benjamin Franklin, caricature

Benjamin Franklin, caricature
Benjamin Franklin. Caricature of the American statesman and scientist Benjamin Franklin (1706- 1790) holding a kite attached to a key, which he used to show that lightning is electricity

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Dmitri Mendeleev and Bohuslav Brauner

Dmitri Mendeleev and Bohuslav Brauner
Dmitry Mendeleyev and Bohuslav Brauner. Mendeleyev (left, 1834-1907) was a Russian chemist, while Brauner (1855-1935) was a Czech chemist

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Janos Bolyai, Hungarian mathematician

Janos Bolyai, Hungarian mathematician
Janos Bolyai (1802-1860), Hungarian mathematician. Bolyai worked on non-Euclidean geometry, publishing a ground-breaking appendix on the subject in 1832

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Ivan Papanin, Soviet Arctic explorer

Ivan Papanin, Soviet Arctic explorer
Ivan Dmitrievich Papanin (1894-1986), Soviet Arctic explorer, in Arctic clothing in 1938. During the winter of 1937-8, Papanin was leader of the Soviet ice drift station SP-1 in the Arctic

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Santiago Ramon y Cajal, histologist

Santiago Ramon y Cajal, histologist
Santiago Ramon y Cajal (1852-1934), Spanish histologist. Ramon y Cajal was apprenticed to a barber and a shoemaker before taking up medicine

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Anton van Leeuwenhoek, caricature

Anton van Leeuwenhoek, caricature
Anton van Leeuwenhoek. Caricature of the Dutch microbiologist Anton van Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723), looking through a magnifying glass to represent his discoveries in microbiology

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Otto Bader, Soviet archaeologist

Otto Bader, Soviet archaeologist
Otto Bader (lower left, 1903-1979), Soviet archaeologist, making notes at an archaeological dig in the Crimea area of Russia, on the shores of the Black Sea

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Robert Boyle, caricature

Robert Boyle, caricature
Robert Boyle. Caricature of the Irish physicist and chemist Robert Boyle (1627-1691), pointing at his air pump. Boyle used this pump, which he made with the assistance of Robert Hooke in 1654

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Grigori Rasputin with Russian soldiers

Grigori Rasputin with Russian soldiers
Grigori Yefimovich Rasputin (1869-1916, centre), Russian mystic. He is flanked by two Russian soldiers: Prince Mikhail Sergeyevich Putyatin (left) and Colonel D. Loman (right)

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Human and gorilla handprint

Human and gorilla handprints. On the left is a handprint from the left hand of a human adult male. On the right is a print from the right hand of a young gorilla

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Computer motherboard, artwork

Computer motherboard, artwork
Motherboard. Computer artwork of the main circuit board (motherboard) of a personal computer (PC). Motherboard components include transistors, diodes, resistors, capacitors and inductors

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Human torso, MRI scan

Human torso, MRI scan
Normal human torso, monochrome profile magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan. The front of the body is at left. The spinal bones (vertebrae) are seen running from the top of the chest (top)

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Cuneiform script

Cuneiform script. Diagram showing the development of pictographs into stylised Cuneiform characters. Cuneiform, the first written language

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Mammoth bone hut excavation, Ukraine

Mammoth bone hut excavation, Ukraine
Mammoth bone hut being excavated by archaeologists near the village of Mezhyrich, Ukraine. The mammoth bones are seen around the archeologists and have been numbered

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Phonetic Egyptian hieroglyphs

Phonetic Egyptian hieroglyphs. Hieroglyphs were written characters used by the Ancient Egyptians between around 3000 BC and 300 AD. They were used mainly for inscriptions on monuments and tombs

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Broken arm bone, digital X-ray

Broken arm bone, digital X-ray
Broken arm bone. Digital frontal X-ray of the fractured right humerus (upper arm bone) of a patient in their early twenties

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Normal hand, digital X-ray

Normal hand, digital X-ray
Normal hand. Digital X-ray of the normal right hand of a patient in their late twenties. Various sets of data relating to the image can be seen around the edges of the X-ray

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: The Dance of Death, allegorical artwork

The Dance of Death, allegorical artwork
The Dance of Death (1493). This artwork, by the German painter Michael Wolgemut (1434-1519), was published in the Liber chronicarum (Book of Chronicles, Nuremburg)

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Caricature of Roentgen and X-rays

Caricature of Roentgen and X-rays. The German experimental physicist Wilhelm Konrad Roentgen (1845-1923) had discovered X-rays in 1895. This artwork shows his skeleton revealed by the use of X-rays

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Quack, satirical artwork

Quack, satirical artwork
Quack. Satirical artwork depicting a quack from Germany. Quack is a derogatory term referring to medical practitioners who defraud patients by claiming to have skills or qualifications that they do

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Model of Sputnik 2

Model of Sputnik 2
Sputnik 2. Cut-away model of the top of the rocket carrying Sputnik 2, the second man-made object to be placed into orbit

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Broken arm, X-ray

Broken arm, X-ray
Broken arm. X-ray of the forearm of a 29 year old male patient with a fractured ulna. Treatment is with immobilisation of the bone, either externally using a cast, or internally using pins

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Franz Gall, German physiologist

Franz Gall, German physiologist
Franz Joseph Gall (1758-1828), German physiologist. Gall believed that the brains shape was related to mental capacity and that different parts of the brain controlled specific parts of the human

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: 1770 Mstricht Mosasaur by Cuvier

1770 Mstricht Mosasaur by Cuvier
1812 Composite description and plate of " the big fossil animal" (later named Mosasaur hoffmanii) from Vol. III, Cuviers " Ossamens Fossiles"

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Carl Vogt, German naturalist

Carl Vogt, German naturalist
Carl Christoph Vogt (1817-1895), German naturalist. Vogt published a number of notable works on physiology, geology and zoology

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Antibiotic action, historical image

Antibiotic action, historical image
Antibiotic action. Historical image taken by the German pathologist Karl Dohle (1855-1928) in 1889, showing the action of an antibiotic compound on Bacillus anthracis (anthrax)

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Karl Rudolphi, Swedish naturalist

Karl Rudolphi, Swedish naturalist. Historical artwork of Karl Asmund Rudolphi (1771-1832). Rudolphi is credited with being the father of helminthology, the study of worms

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Far side of the moon

Far side of the moon. Simulation based on the first images taken of the far side of the moon by the Soviet Luna 3 space probe

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Georg Hegel, caricature

Georg Hegel, caricature
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel. Caricatuer of the German philosopher Georg Hegel (1770-1831). Hegel referred to reality as the Absolute Spirit

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Thomas Hobbes, caricature

Thomas Hobbes, caricature
Thomas Hobbes. Caricature of the English philosopher Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679). Hobbes led a sheltered and long life, mostly as secretary and teacher to the family of Lord Cavendish

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Rene Descartes, caricature

Rene Descartes, caricature
Rene Descartes. Caricature of the French philosopher and mathematician Rene Descartes (1596-1650). While travelling in Europe as a young man

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: England, Greater London, Pool of London. The iconic Tower Bridge which spans the River Thames near

England, Greater London, Pool of London. The iconic Tower Bridge which spans the River Thames near the Tower of London

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: England, Northumberland, Embleton Bay. The Lilburn Tower, part of the remains of Dunstanburgh Castle

England, Northumberland, Embleton Bay. The Lilburn Tower, part of the remains of Dunstanburgh Castle, viewed from Embleton Bay

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: England, Tyne and Wear, Gateshead

England, Tyne and Wear, Gateshead. The iconic Angel of the North, built on a a former colliery pit head bath site and now one of the worlds most viewed work of art with over 33 million viewers each

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: England, Tyne and Wear, Gibside Estate

England, Tyne and Wear, Gibside Estate. Burdock Seed Heads located within woodland forming the Gibside Estate

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Jimmy Greaves scores for England against Italy at 1961 +

Jimmy Greaves scores for England against Italy at 1961 +
Football - 1960 / 1961 International Friendly - Italy 2 England 3 The Italian Goalkeeper cannot stop Jimmy Greaves of England scoring at the Stadio Olimpico, Rome

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: De Laval steam turbine

De Laval steam turbine. Diagram of a cross-section through the steam turbine invented by the Swedish engineer Gustaf de Laval (1845-1913). De Laval built his first steam turbine in 1887

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: Infrared spectrometer, 1954

Infrared spectrometer, 1954
Infrared spectrometer. Researcher using an infrared grating spectrometer. This is used to analyse the composition of chemicals by recording the wavelengths at which they absorb infrared radiation

Background imageMono Chrome Collection: High-pressure steam engine, 19th century

High-pressure steam engine, 19th century design. Fuel burnt in the furnace (right) produced steam that drove the piston (centre), which transferred energy to the flywheel (left)



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"Mono Chrome: A Journey through Time and Art" Step into a world where shades of black and white intertwine, revealing the essence of history, science, and art. From the 1919 solar eclipse to Da Vinci's crossbow, each hint in this captivating collection unveils a unique facet of our human experience. As the sun hid behind the moon during that fateful eclipse in 1919, scientists witnessed an extraordinary phenomenon that confirmed Einstein's theory of general relativity. The monochromatic scene symbolized mankind's relentless pursuit of knowledge. In Durer's iconic artwork depicting praying hands, we find solace in simplicity. These hands transcend language barriers and remind us of our shared humanity—a powerful message conveyed through monochrome strokes. The grainy footage captured by Roger Patterson in 1967 brought Bigfoot into popular culture. This mysterious creature emerged from shadows cast by black-and-white film reels, leaving viewers captivated by its enigmatic existence. A haunting figure from the past emerges with plague doctor artwork dating back to the 17th century. In their eerie masks and dark robes, these doctors fought against disease while embodying both fear and hope within their monochromatic presence. Mendeleyev's periodic table revolutionized chemistry when it was published in 1869. Each element found its place on this grayscale chart—forming a mosaic that unraveled nature's secrets one square at a time. Amelia Earhart soared above gender norms as she became a pioneering figure in US aviation history. Against the backdrop of her daring flights stood her monochrome aircraft—an emblematic representation of courage defying societal limitations. The HMS Beagle ship carried Charles Darwin on his transformative voyage around the world. Its silhouette laid up ashore serves as a reminder that scientific breakthroughs often begin with humble beginnings—a testament to exploration painted only with shades between black and white. Carl Sagan gazed upon distant galaxies as he unraveled the mysteries of our universe.