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Images Dated 11th September 2009 (page 6)

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Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Africa, Namibia

Africa, Namibia
Namibia, Namib-Naukluft Park, Sossusvlei. Signage for a Namib Desert sand dune called Dune 45

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Namibia, Namib-Naukluft Park, Sossusvlei. A beetle makes tracks on Namib Desert sand dunes

Namibia, Namib-Naukluft Park, Sossusvlei. A beetle makes tracks on Namib Desert sand dunes

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Namibia, Namib-Naukluft Park, Sossusvlei. Close-up of animal tracks on a sand dune in Namib Desert

Namibia, Namib-Naukluft Park, Sossusvlei. Close-up of animal tracks on a sand dune in Namib Desert

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Namibia, Namib-Naukluft Park, Sossusvlei, Sossusvlei. Dancing white lady spider

Namibia, Namib-Naukluft Park, Sossusvlei, Sossusvlei. Dancing white lady spider on the sand dunes shown with human hand for scale

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Namibia, Namib-Naukluft Park, Sossusvlei. Animal tracks on a sand dune in Namib Desert

Namibia, Namib-Naukluft Park, Sossusvlei. Animal tracks on a sand dune in Namib Desert

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Namibia, Namib-Naukluft Park, Sossusvlei. Oryx grazes in tree shade

Namibia, Namib-Naukluft Park, Sossusvlei. Oryx grazes in tree shade

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Namibia, Namib-Naukluft Park, Sossusvlei. Sunrise over the sand dunes

Namibia, Namib-Naukluft Park, Sossusvlei. Sunrise over the sand dunes

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Africa, Kenya

Africa, Kenya
Secretarybird (Segittarius Serpentarius) as seen in the Masai Mara

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Mantle convection, 3-D computer model

Mantle convection, 3-D computer model
Mantle convection. 3-D computer model showing the movement of magma which rises as hot plumes (light orange) heated by the Earths core (dark orange)

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Francis Bacon, English philosopher

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

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Coral reef community

Coral reef community. Coral reefs are extensive and diverse marine ecosystems. Corals themselves are tiny animals that live in colonies

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Etienne Malus, French physicist

Etienne Malus, French physicist
Etienne Malus. Portrait of the French physicist Etienne Louis Malus (1775-1812). Malus was a military engineer in Napoleons army from 1796 to 1801

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Augustin de Candolle, Swiss botanist

Augustin de Candolle, Swiss botanist
Augustin de Candolle. Coloured portrait of the Swiss botanist Augustin-Pyramus de Candolle (1778-1841). Candolle is most famous for his Elementary Theory of Botany, which he published in 1813

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Augustin Jean Fresnel, French physicist

Augustin Jean Fresnel, French physicist
Augustin Jean Fresnel (1788-1827), French physicist. Fresnel qualified as an engineer, but was temporarily removed from his government post in 1815 for supporting the Royalists against Napoleon

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: DNA molecule, artwork

DNA molecule, artwork
DNA molecule. Computer artwork representing the molecular structure of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), which is composed of two strands twisted into a double helix

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: DNA molecule, artwork

DNA molecule, artwork
DNA molecule. Computer artwork representing the molecular structure of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), with binary code printed on the atoms. DNA is composed of two strands twisted into a double helix

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Mantle convection, 3-D computer model

Mantle convection, 3-D computer model
Mantle convection. 3-D computer model showing plumes of magma (dark grey) circulating within the Earths mantle. The heat that drives this convective process originates from the Earths core

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Louis-Jacques Thenard, French chemist

Louis-Jacques Thenard, French chemist
Louis-Jacques Thenard (1777-1857), French chemist. Thenard, the son of a peasant, made his fortune by discovering Thenards blue

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: DNA molecule, artwork

DNA molecule, artwork
DNA molecule. Computer artwork representing the molecular structure of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), which is composed of two strands twisted into a double helix

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: DNA molecule, artwork

DNA molecule, artwork
DNA molecule. Computer artwork representing the molecular structure of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), which is composed of two strands twisted into a double helix

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: DNA molecule, artwork

DNA molecule, artwork
DNA molecule. Computer artwork representing the molecular structure of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), which is composed of two strands twisted into a double helix

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Spotted cuscus

Spotted cuscus (Spilocuscus maculatus) feeding inside a domestic hut. This cat-sized marsupial is a nocturnal omnivore that mainly lives in trees

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Joseph Fourier, French mathematician

Joseph Fourier, French mathematician
Joseph Fourier. Portrait of the French mathematician Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier, (1768-1830). Fourier devised the Fourier series and the Fourier Integral Theorem

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: DNA molecule, artwork

DNA molecule, artwork
DNA molecule. Computer artwork representing the molecular structure of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), which is composed of two strands twisted into a double helix

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Emilie du Chatelet, French physicist

Emilie du Chatelet, French physicist
Emilie du Chatelet. Portrait of the French physicist Emilie du Chatelet (1706-1749). Du Chatelet is best known for her translation of Isaac Newtons Principia Mathematica which was published after her

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Jean Lamarck, French naturalist

Jean Lamarck, French naturalist
Jean Lamarck (1744-1829), French naturalist. Lamarck proposed early ideas on evolution and the variation of species in his book Zoological Philosophy (1809)

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Emilie du Chatelet, French physicist

Emilie du Chatelet, French physicist
Emilie du Chatelet. Portrait of the French physicist Emilie du Chatelet (1706-1749). Du Chatelet is best known for her translation of Isaac Newtons Principia Mathematica which was published after her

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Spotted cuscus tail

Spotted cuscus tail (Spilocuscus maculatus). This is a prehensile tail with which the spotted cuscus, a cat-sized marsupial, can hang from tree branches

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: DNA molecule, artwork

DNA molecule, artwork
DNA molecule. Computer artwork representing the molecular structure of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), which is composed of two strands twisted into a double helix

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Mantle convection, 3-D computer model

Mantle convection, 3-D computer model
Mantle convection. 3-D computer model showing the movement of magma which rises as hot plumes (light purple) heated by the Earths core (orange)

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Chiton

Chiton attached to a rock. Chitons, also known as coat-of-mail shells, are slow moving molluscs with shells composed of multiple plates. They graze on algae and breathe through gills

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Blue-eyed triplefin

Blue-eyed triplefin (Notoclinops segmentatus). Photographed off the Poor Knights Islands, New Zealand

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Blue-eyed triplefin

Blue-eyed triplefin (Notoclinops segmentatus). Photographed off the Poor Knights Islands, New Zealand

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: School of blue maomao

School of blue maomao (Scorpis violacea). Photographed off the Poor Knights Islands, New Zealand

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Strap kelp and blue maomao

Strap kelp and blue maomao
Strap kelp (Lessonia sp.) and a school of blue maomao (Scorpis violacea). Photographed off the Poor Knights Islands, New Zealand

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Strap kelp

Strap kelp (Lessonia sp.). Photographed off the Poor Knights Islands, New Zealand

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Grouper and golden trevallies

Grouper and golden trevallies
Grouper (Epinephelus lanceolatus) and golden trevallies (Gnathanodon speciosus). The giant grouper is also known as the brindle bass, brown spotted cod, or bumblebee grouper

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Grouper and golden trevallies

Grouper and golden trevallies
Grouper (Epinephelus lanceolatus) and golden trevallies (Gnathanodon speciosus). The giant grouper is also known as the brindle bass, brown spotted cod, or bumblebee grouper

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Saddleback anemonefish eggs

Saddleback anemonefish eggs (Amphiprion polymnus). The eggs were fertilised by the male as they were laid by the female and take about 6-10 days to hatch

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: School of bumphead parrotfish

School of bumphead parrotfish (Bolbometopon muricatum). This species, found in the Indo-Pacific region, is the largest of all parrotfish, reaching lengths of 1.3 metres

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: School of Boers batfish

School of Boers batfish (Platax boersii). Photographed off Sipadan, Sabah, Malaysia

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: School of bumphead parrotfish

School of bumphead parrotfish (Bolbometopon muricatum). This species, found in the Indo-Pacific region, is the largest of all parrotfish, reaching lengths of 1.3 metres

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Ice, molecular model

Ice, molecular model
Ice. Molecular model showing the hexagonal structure of ice. Atoms are represented as spheres and are colour-coded: hydrogen (grey) and oxygen (red). The lattice structure of ice gives it its rigidity

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Atomic structure, conceptual artwork

Atomic structure, conceptual artwork
Atomic structure. Conceptual computer artwork of electron orbit paths as rings around the central nucleus (yellow) of an atom. This is a classical schematic Bohr model of the atom

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Ice, molecular model

Ice, molecular model
Ice. Molecular model showing the hexagonal structure of ice. Atoms are represented as spheres and are colour-coded: hydrogen (white) and oxygen (red)

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Ice, molecular model

Ice, molecular model
Ice. Molecular model showing the hexagonal structure of ice. Atoms are represented as spheres and are colour-coded: hydrogen (grey) and oxygen (red). The lattice structure of ice gives it its rigidity

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Day octopus

Day octopus (Octopus cyanea). This octopus, also known as the common reef octopus, is common in the tropical Indo-Pacific region and, unusually for an octopus, it is active by day

Background imageImages Dated 11th September 2009: Day octopus

Day octopus (Octopus cyanea). This octopus, also known as the common reef octopus, is common in the tropical Indo-Pacific region and, unusually for an octopus, it is active by day



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