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Images Dated 24th November 2010

Choose a picture from our Images Dated 24th November 2010 Collection for your Wall Art and Photo Gifts

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Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Bridgetown, Barbados, after 1766 fire

Bridgetown, Barbados, after 1766 fire
Bridgetown fire. Map of Bridgetown (or Bridge Town), capital of Barbados. The map was printed in 1766 and shows the extent of damage done during the fire of May 13-14

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Human muscle structure, artwork

Human muscle structure, artwork
Human muscle structure. Computer artwork showing the muscle structure of the gluteal region of a human. The sciatic nerve can also be seen (yellow)

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Martin Luther, German theologian

Martin Luther, German theologian
Martin Luther (1483-1546), German theologian and founder of the Protestant Reformation. Luther was born at Eisleben. Initially trained in law

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Engraving of a nautilus and an ammonite

Engraving of a nautilus and an ammonite. The nautilus is one of the species of marine cephalopods of the family Nautilidae

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Phoenician coins and writing

Phoenician coins and writing
Phoenician coins. Engraving depicting various coins and medals from the Phoenician civilisation. Phoenicia existed as a collection of city states in the coastal areas of modern day Lebanon and Syria

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Thomas Wright, British astronomer

Thomas Wright, British astronomer
Thomas Wright (1711-86), British astronomer. Wright was born at Byers Green in northern England. In 1730 he set up a school at which he taught mathematics and navigation

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Engraving of a tree split by lightning

Engraving of a tree split by lightning
Engraving depicting a tree that had split after being hit by lightning at Hanwell, west London. When a lightning bolt strikes a tree

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Isaac Newton, English physicist

Isaac Newton, English physicist
Sir Isaac Newton (1643-1727), British physicist, mathematician and astronomer. Newtons most famous works are Principia Mathematica (1687) and Opticks (1704)

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Ebola virus, molecular model

Ebola virus, molecular model
Ebola virus. Molecular model showing the structure of an ebola virus. It consists of a ribonucleic acid (RNA) genome (orange) within a protein nucleocapsid (white blobs)

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Engraving of an early azimuth compass

Engraving of an early azimuth compass
Azimuth compass. Engraved illustration of an early design of azimuth compass. This is designed to tell the angle between magnetic north and the Suns position

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Richard Bentley, English scholar

Richard Bentley, English scholar
Richard Bentley (1662-1742), English classical scholar. Bentley was born near Leeds, Yorkshire, and was educated at Wakefield and at St. Johns College, Cambridge

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Franklins magic circle of circles

Franklins magic circle of circles
Magic circle of circles. Figure derived by Benjamin Franklin containing the numbers 12 to 75 inclusive on a set of concentric circular spaces across eight radii

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Solar system, 18th century engraving

Solar system, 18th century engraving
Solar System. Engraved plate form the 18th century depicting the Solar System. At the centre is the Sun, with the terrestrial planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars) close by

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Gram-negative bacteria, artwork

Gram-negative bacteria, artwork
Gram-negative bacteria. Computer artwork showing the cell structure of a gram-negative bacterium. Gram-negative bacteria are bacteria that do not retain crystal violet dye in the Gram staining

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Treatment of achilles tendon rupture

Treatment of achilles tendon rupture
Treatment of injury of the achilles tendon. 18th century illustrations mainly concerned with treatment of a ruptured achilles tendon

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Anthony Ashley-Cooper 3rd Earl Shaftsbury

Anthony Ashley-Cooper 3rd Earl Shaftsbury
Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 3rd Earl Shaftsbury (1671-1713), English politician and writer. Ashley-Cooper was born in London and educated at Winchester College

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Drawing of an armillary sphere

Drawing of an armillary sphere
Armillary sphere. 18th century engraving of an armillary sphere, here termed an artificial sphere. This is a model of the celestial sphere

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Viral transfer of bacterial DNA, artwork

Viral transfer of bacterial DNA, artwork
Viral transfer of bacterial DNA. Computer artwork showing the process of transduction, whereby genetic information is transferred from one bacterium (right column) to another (left column)

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Engraving of fossil crocodile

Engraving of fossil crocodile
Fossil crocodile. 18th century engraving depicting a fossil skeleton of a crocodile. This was discovered at Whitby, Yorkshire, in the alum shales in 1758 by Captain William Chapman

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Engraving of a dissected heart

Engraving of a dissected heart
18th century dissection of a heart. This engraving purports to show a serpent that was found in the left ventricle of the heart (right hand side)

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Antimicrobial wound dressing, SEM

Antimicrobial wound dressing, SEM
Antimicrobial wound dressing. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of fibres (diagonal) from an Aquacel Ag wound dressing

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Francis Bacon, English philosopher

Francis Bacon, English philosopher
Francis Bacon (1561-1626), English philosopher and statesman. Bacon wrote extensively on philosophy, advocating inductive reasoning from fact through axiom to law

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: 18th century engraving of a kangaroo

18th century engraving of a kangaroo
Kangaroo. 18th century engraving of a kangaroo, described as a new species found on the coast of New South Wales. The first European to see a kangaroo was James Cook in 1770

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Pietro Giannone, Italian historian

Pietro Giannone, Italian historian
Pietro Giannone (1676-1748), Italian historian. Giannone was born at Ischitella in the south-east of Italy. At the age of 18 he went to Naples to study law

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Jedediah Buxton, English mathematician

Jedediah Buxton, English mathematician
Jedediah Buxton (1705-72), English mathematical savant. Buxton was born on the state of Elmton in Derbyshire. He had little education despite being the son of a schoolmaster

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Christian Wolff, German philosopher

Christian Wolff, German philosopher
Christian Wolff (1679-1754), German philosopher. Wolff was born at Breslau in Silesia. He studied mathematics, physics and natural philosophy at the University of Jena, where he graduated in 1703

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Viscount Bolingbroke, English statesman

Viscount Bolingbroke, English statesman
Henry St. John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke (1678-1751), English politician and statesman. St. John was born at Battersea, London and educated at Eton College

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: John Knox, Scottish theologian

John Knox, Scottish theologian
John Knox (1505-1572), Scottish clergyman. Knox was born at Haddington in East Lothian, Scotland, and educated at the University of St. Andrews in theology

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Hugo Grotius, Dutch jurist

Hugo Grotius, Dutch jurist
Hugo Grotius (1583-1645), Dutch jurist and founder of international law. Grotius was born at Delft and at just 11 years of age went to university at Leiden. He became an advocate in 1599

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Cylinder sun dial

Cylinder sun dial
Engraving of a cylinder sun dial. Also known as a shepherds or pillar dial, this is a latitude-specific design and so is not suitable for travel

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Engraving of hemlock plant

Engraving of hemlock plant
Hemlock. 18th century engraving of a hemlock plant. Hemlock (Conium maculatum) is a highly poisonous perennial herbaceous flowering plant

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Heart of King George II, engraving

Heart of King George II, engraving
The Kings heart. An engraving of the heart of King George II of Great Britain and Ireland. George II was born in 1683 and ascended the throne in 1727 on the death of his father, George I

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Herbert of Cherbury, English philosopher

Herbert of Cherbury, English philosopher
Edward Herbert, 1st Baron Herbert of Cherbury (1583-1648), English diplomat, poet and philosopher. Herbert was born at Wroxeter in Shropshire, eastern England

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Horatio Walpole, 4th Earl of Oxford

Horatio Walpole, 4th Earl of Oxford (1717-97), British politician and author. Horatio was born in London, youngest son of prime minister Robert Walpole

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Brain anatomy, 3D artwork

Brain anatomy, 3D artwork
Brain anatomy. 3D artwork of a cut-away model of the human brain. At bottom is the brainstem, which controls automatic functions

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Dorothy Osborne, English letter writer

Dorothy Osborne, English letter writer
Dorothy Osborne, Lady Temple (1627-95), English letter writer. Osborne was born at Chicksands Priory in Bedfordshire into a noble family

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: PPAR regulatory molecule

PPAR regulatory molecule. Molecular model of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARG, pink) bound to a DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) molecule (orange and yellow)

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Nicolas Fabri de Peiresc, astronomer

Nicolas Fabri de Peiresc, astronomer
Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc (1580-1637), French astronomer. Peiresc was born into a wealthy family at Aix-en-Provence. He studied at Toulon and Montpellier, graduating in law in 1605

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Engraving of Jamaican plant and cockroach

Engraving of Jamaican plant and cockroach
Jamaican flora and fauna. Engraved page depicting Jamaican worm grass (Spigella anthelmia) and a cockroach. Worm grass is a poisonous tropical annual weed growing to around 30cm tall

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Robert Boyle, Irish chemist

Robert Boyle, Irish chemist
Robert Boyle (1627-1691), Irish chemist. Boyle established chemistry as a separate science and stressed the need for experimental precision and accurate observation

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: David Hume, Scottish philosopher

David Hume, Scottish philosopher
David Hume (1711-76), Scottish philosopher and historian. Hume was born and educated at Edinburgh. He rejected the idea of causality

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Druids being converted to Christianity

Druids being converted to Christianity
Engraving depicting Druids being converted to Christianity. The Druids are shown conducting the ritual of oak and mistletoe

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: PPAR regulatory molecule

PPAR regulatory molecule. Molecular model of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARG, pink) bound to a DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) molecule (orange and green)

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Antimicrobial wound dressing, SEM

Antimicrobial wound dressing, SEM
Antimicrobial wound dressing. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of fibres (diagonal) from an Aquacel Ag wound dressing

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Reviving the apparently dead

Reviving the apparently dead
Reviving the dead. 18th century illustration of apparatus for reviving the apparently dead. This consists of a metal water tank, filled with warm water

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: 17th century solar clock

17th century solar clock
Middle Temple 002

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Map of the Garden of Eden

Map of the Garden of Eden
Garden of Eden. 18th century diagram showing the supposed layout of the Garden of Eden. The description in the Bible tells of a garden in a region called Eden with four rivers

Background imageImages Dated 24th November 2010: Priestleys apparatus for gas experiments

Priestleys apparatus for gas experiments
Priestleys apparatus. Engraving showing apparatus used by Joseph Priestley in his experiments on air. The types of air used are fixed air (carbon dioxide)



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