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Images Dated 17th November 2004 (page 2)

139 items

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Magnetizing cooling iron

Magnetizing cooling iron. Historical artwork of a blacksmith magnetizing a piece of cooling iron. The smith is hammering the iron

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Giant squid

Giant squid (Architeuthis sp.). This sea creature has been the focus of myths and legends for more than two thousand years

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Dragons

Dragons. Myths and legends about dragons can be found worldwide. In many western cultures, the dragon is a symbol of death and evil

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Great white shark

Great white shark

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Bigfoot

Bigfoot. This mythical primate is said to live in the deep forests of North America and Canada. The earliest American report of Bigfoot was made by the explorer David Thompson in 1811

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Mermaids with dolphins

Mermaids with dolphins. These mythical creatures, half-woman and half-fish, were first described by the Syrians, who worshipped a Semitic mermaid moon-goddess called Atargatis

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Unicorn

Unicorn. The unicorn is an imaginary animal similar to a horse, with a single horn growing from its forehead. The myth of the unicorn is found throughout world legends

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Medusa

Medusa. In Greek mythology, Medusa was one of three Gorgon sisters. Medusa began life as a beautiful mortal, who bragged of being more attractive than the goddess Athena

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Secretory cells in pancreas, SEM

Secretory cells in pancreas, SEM
Pancreatic secretory cells. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of a freeze-fracture through a healthy pancreas, showing the secretory tissue

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Secretory cells in pancreas, SEM

Secretory cells in pancreas, SEM
Pancreatic secretory cells. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of a freeze-fracture through a healthy pancreas, showing the secretory tissue

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Future red giant Sun

Future red giant Sun

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Death of the Sun

Death of the Sun. Artwork of the Sun forming a planetary nebula at the end of its lifetime. A planetary nebula is an expanding shell of gas (blue and pink)

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Future Earth

Future Earth. Artwork of the surface of a barren future Earth orbiting the Sun (blue, lower left), which has become a white dwarf. The Moon is seen at centre right

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Rho Ophiuchi nebulosity

Rho Ophiuchi nebulosity. Optical image of nebulosity in the region of the star Rho Ophiuchi (purple, just above centre). North is at top

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Eclipsing binary star system

Eclipsing binary star system. Artwork of W Ursae Majoris, an eclipsing binary system located around 200 light years away from Earth

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Diagram of comms satellites linked by lasers

Diagram of comms satellites linked by lasers
Laser satellite communication. Artwork of the laser bridge concept for linking communications satellites in orbit. At present (1995)

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Star trails

Star trails over a lake. These streaks of light are formed on long-exposure photographs due to the apparent motion of the stars caused by the Earths rotation

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Partial solar eclipse

Partial solar eclipse. Sequence of images of the setting Sun during the partial solar eclipse of 30th July 2000. The sequence runs from left to right

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Total solar eclipse

Total solar eclipse of 11th August 1999, at totality. Solar eclipses occur when the Moon passes between the Earth and the Sun, and the shadow of the Moon crosses the Earth

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Partial solar eclipse

Partial solar eclipse. Sequence of images of the Sun during the partial solar eclipse of 25th December 2000. The sequence runs along each row from left to right, starting at top left

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Solar eclipse

Solar eclipse. Composite of images of the Sun and Moon approaching totality during the total solar eclipse of 11th August 1999, showing Bailys beads, the solar chromosphere and prominences

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Variable star

Variable star. Artwork of a variable Mira-type binary star system, seen from the surface of a nearby planet. The system, which consists of a large red giant star (left)

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Tau Ceti planetary system

Tau Ceti planetary system. Artwork of the surface of a hypothetical planet in orbit around the star Tau Ceti. Other planets in this planetary system are also seen

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Apollo 17 landing site on Moon

Apollo 17 landing site on Moon
Apollo 17 landing site. Artwork of the Taurus- Littrow region of the Moon, site of the Apollo 17 mission landing. The stars are shown as they appeared at the time of landing

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Scuba diver

Scuba diver swimming underwater, reflected on the oceans surface. Scuba is an acronym for self- contained underwater breathing apparatus

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Apollo mission splashdown

Apollo mission splashdown. Artwork of an Apollo mission command module on the surface of the ocean after splashdown (landing)

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Leonid meteors

Leonid meteors. Optical time-exposure image of Leonid meteors (green/white streaks) against a starfield. Meteors, or shooting stars

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Leonid meteors

Leonid meteors

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Leonid meteors

Leonid meteors. Optical time-exposure image of Leonid meteors (diagonal streaks) and star trails (curved tracks) over trees

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Leonid meteors

Leonid meteors

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Leonid meteors

Leonid meteors

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Swirling effect around ear pinna of a child

Swirling effect around ear pinna of a child
Ear pinna. Swirling effect around the ear pinna (auricle) of a young girl. This fleshy part of the outer ear, made of cartilage and skin, serves to collect sound and direct it into the ear canal

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Dengue fever virus particles, TEM

Dengue fever virus particles, TEM
Dengue fever virus particles. Coloured transmission electron micrograph (TEM) of dengue fever virus particles (yellow) in a cell

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Rift Valley fever virus, TEM

Rift Valley fever virus, TEM
Rift Valley fever virus. Coloured transmission electron micrograph (TEM) of three Rift Valley fever virus particles (virions)

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Rift Valley fever virus, TEM

Rift Valley fever virus, TEM
Rift Valley fever virus. Coloured transmission electron micrograph (TEM) of Rift Valley fever virus particles (orange) in a mouse liver cell

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Dengue fever virus particles, TEM

Dengue fever virus particles, TEM

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Dengue fever virus replication, TEM

Dengue fever virus replication, TEM

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Rift Valley fever virus, TEM

Rift Valley fever virus, TEM
Rift Valley fever virus. Coloured transmission electron micrograph (TEM) of three Rift Valley fever virus particles (virions)

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Dengue fever virus replication, TEM

Dengue fever virus replication, TEM
Dengue fever virus replication. Coloured transmission electron micrograph (TEM) of dengue fever virus virions (blue) replicating in a cell

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Osteoarthritic pelvis, X-ray

Osteoarthritic pelvis, X-ray
Osteoarthritis. Coloured X-ray of the pelvis of a 52-year-old man showing areas of osteoarthritis (orange). The two femurs (upper leg bones)

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Thomas Huxley, British biologist

Thomas Huxley, British biologist
Thomas Henry Huxley (1825-1895), British biologist. Huxley was a strong advocate of Darwins theory of evolution by natural selection

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: James Hall, US palaeontologist

James Hall, US palaeontologist
James Hall (1811-1898), American geologist and palaeontologist. Hall worked on the Geological Survey of New York State, USA from 1836

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Osteoporotic bone, SEM

Osteoporotic bone, SEM
Osteoporotic bone. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of fractured bone tissue from a patient suffering from osteoporosis (brittle bone disease)

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Osteoporotic bone, SEM

Osteoporotic bone, SEM
Osteoporotic bone. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of fractured bone tissue from a patient suffering from osteoporosis (brittle bone disease)

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Osteoporotic bone, SEM

Osteoporotic bone, SEM

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Benjamin Silliman, US chemist

Benjamin Silliman, US chemist
Benjamin Silliman Senior (1779-1864), American chemist. Silliman initially studied law, but in 1802 he was appointed as professor of chemistry and natural history at Yale University, USA

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Edward Hitchcock, US geologist

Edward Hitchcock, US geologist
Edward Hitchcock (1793-1864), American geologist. Hitchcock began his career as a teacher and a clergyman, but later became professor of chemistry at Amherst College, Massachusetts, USA

Background imageImages Dated 17th November 2004: Joseph Henry, US physicist

Joseph Henry, US physicist
Joseph Henry (1797-1878), American physicist. Henry improved the design of the electromagnet, using a soft iron core wrapped in many turns of wire



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