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Chemicals Collection (page 3)

"Unveiling the Secrets: Exploring the Fascinating World of Chemicals" Dmitri Mendeleev's Legacy: The Father of the Periodic Table A Playful Caricature

Background imageChemicals Collection: EyeUbiquitous_20057776

EyeUbiquitous_20057776
Kenya, plane spraying crops

Background imageChemicals Collection: EyeUbiquitous_10007485

EyeUbiquitous_10007485
Sri Lanka, Nuwara Eliya, Hand painted billboard poster advertising Glycel weed killer fertiliser from Anglo Asian Fertilisers containing Glyphosate a systemic herbicide originally patented by

Background imageChemicals Collection: EyeUbiquitous_20108454

EyeUbiquitous_20108454
Canada, Alberta, Del Bonita, CanElson Drilling Inc of Calgary fracking for tight shale oil in a wheat field at the edge of the Baaken play

Background imageChemicals Collection: EyeUbiquitous_20109455

EyeUbiquitous_20109455
Canada, Alberta, Del Bonita, CanElson Drilling Inc of Calgary fracking for tight shale oil in a wheat field at the edge of the Baaken play

Background imageChemicals Collection: EyeUbiquitous_20109453

EyeUbiquitous_20109453
Canada, Alberta, Del Bonita, Fracking for oils and gas on the edge of the Baaken play

Background imageChemicals Collection: EyeUbiquitous_20109452

EyeUbiquitous_20109452
Canada, Alberta, Del Bonita, Fracking near a water source for tight shale oil and gas on the edge of the Bakken play. Ensign Energy of Calgary drilling rig, water storage tanks and road tanker

Background imageChemicals Collection: EyeUbiquitous_20104538

EyeUbiquitous_20104538
USA, Florida, Tampa, An attempt to put an environment friendly face on oil storage tanks along Maritime Boulevard, heaps of coal and chemicals in front of industrial plant

Background imageChemicals Collection: Picture No. 12479492

Picture No. 12479492
Concept image to illustrate marine micoplastic Date:

Background imageChemicals Collection: Picture No. 12479490

Picture No. 12479490
Marine fish larvae eat microplastics. Small pieces Date:

Background imageChemicals Collection: Picture No. 12479491

Picture No. 12479491
Marine fish larvae eat microplastics. Small pieces Date:

Background imageChemicals Collection: WW1 - German-taught Turkish Chemists preparing Poisonous Gas

WW1 - German-taught Turkish Chemists preparing Poisonous Gases - 12th June 1915. Date: 1915

Background imageChemicals Collection: Sectional view of lead chambers for large-scale production of sulphuric acid, 1870

Sectional view of lead chambers for large-scale production of sulphuric acid, 1870. Also known as Oil of Vitriol or H2S04, sulphuric acid was one of the most important of industrial chemicals

Background imageChemicals Collection: Sectional view of Gay-Lussacs lead chambers and absorption towers, 1870

Sectional view of Gay-Lussacs lead chambers and absorption towers, 1870. These were for the large-scale production of sulphuric acid also (Oil of Vitriol or H2SO4)

Background imageChemicals Collection: Lead chambers for large-scale production of sulphuric acid, 1874

Lead chambers for large-scale production of sulphuric acid, 1874. Sectional view showing the process from beginning to end from the furnace (left) to the denitrating (or Glover) tower (right)

Background imageChemicals Collection: Platinum still for concentrating sulphuric acid (Oil of Vitriol or H2S04), 1844

Platinum still for concentrating sulphuric acid (Oil of Vitriol or H2S04), 1844. The view shown here was at the Felling Chemical Works, Newcastle-upon-Tyne. From British Manufacturers by George Dodd

Background imageChemicals Collection: Production of sulphuric acid (Oil of Vitriol or H2S04), 1844

Production of sulphuric acid (Oil of Vitriol or H2S04), 1844. View of the passage between two lead chambers, Felling Chemical Works, Newcastle, England. From The Penny Magazine. (London 1844)

Background imageChemicals Collection: Distillation of Oil of Vitriol (sulphuric acid or H2S04), 1651

Distillation of Oil of Vitriol (sulphuric acid or H2S04), 1651. An iron retort with cover, detail at C, D, is placed in a furnace and connected to a receiver at A

Background imageChemicals Collection: Soap manufacturing, c1905

Soap manufacturing, c1905. The Vinolia Soap Companys London laboratory where raw materials and essential oils were tested

Background imageChemicals Collection: Webbs chemical factory, Diglis, Worcestershire, c1860

Webbs chemical factory, Diglis, Worcestershire, c1860. The tall building to the right behind the chimney contains lead chambers for the production of Sulphuric Acid

Background imageChemicals Collection: Inflation of Charles and the Robert brothers hydrogen balloon, 1783 (c1807)

Inflation of Charles and the Robert brothers hydrogen balloon, 1783 (c1807). Jean and Noel Robert helping Jacques Charles (1746-1823)

Background imageChemicals Collection: Inflating a hydrogen balloon, 1845

Inflating a hydrogen balloon, 1845. Hydrogen is produced by covering barrels of iron filings with sulphuric acid. The gas is then fed into the balloon

Background imageChemicals Collection: Darkroom photograph enlarger C014 / 1249

Darkroom photograph enlarger C014 / 1249
Darkroom photograph enlarger. Durst 606 colour and black-and-white enlarger dating from the 1970s. This equipment is used to enlarge photographs from negatives

Background imageChemicals Collection: Alchemical symbols, 18th century C013 / 5276

Alchemical symbols, 18th century C013 / 5276
Alchemical symbols. 18th-century listing of characters and symbols used by alchemists to represent chemicals, elements, and other objects and processes

Background imageChemicals Collection: Chemical plant

Chemical plant. Aerial view of the ICI Wilton chemical plant (top left) in Teesside, Cleveland, UK. Also seen are the nearby residential areas (lower centre) and the North Sea (right)

Background imageChemicals Collection: Single Glass Flask With Blue Solution

Single Glass Flask With Blue Solution

Background imageChemicals Collection: Two Glass Flasks With Colored Solutions

Two Glass Flasks With Colored Solutions

Background imageChemicals Collection: glass laboratory flasks

glass laboratory flasks
Glass flasks with liquid as used in research and science labs for scientific, medical, and chemical analysis and research

Background imageChemicals Collection: WW1 - Austrian Scientists at work in Adana, Turkey

WW1 - Austrian Scientists at work in Adana, Turkey
A pair of Austrian Scientists working in secrecy in Adana, Turkey during the First Work War. Note the portrait of Archduke Franz Ferdinand

Background imageChemicals Collection: Picture No. 11014614

Picture No. 11014614
Quinidine Liquified Quinidine is a chemical precurser to the antimalarial drug quinine - The image was produced using a polarising microscope and post processed in Adobe Photoshop Date:

Background imageChemicals Collection: Picture No. 11014613

Picture No. 11014613
Quinidine Swirl Quinidine is a chemical precurser to the antimalarial drug quinine - The image was produced using a polarising microscope and post processed in Adobe Photoshop Date:

Background imageChemicals Collection: Canine olfactory system, artwork C018 / 0295

Canine olfactory system, artwork C018 / 0295
Canine olfactory system. Artwork showing the complicated airways inside a dogs nose that allow olfaction (its sense of smell)

Background imageChemicals Collection: Berthold Schwarz, German alchemist C013 / 9550

Berthold Schwarz, German alchemist C013 / 9550
Berthold Schwarz. Historical engraving of the German alchemist and monk Berthold Schwarz experimenting with gunpowder. Schwarz was the first person to use gunpowder to shoot projectiles

Background imageChemicals Collection: GLC-LFB Chemical Incident Unit (CIU)

GLC-LFB Chemical Incident Unit (CIU)
The mid 1970s saw a number of innovative appliance designs come into play as the London Fire Brigade adapted to an ever changing and more Health and Safety conscious working environment

Background imageChemicals 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 imageChemicals Collection: Metal salt crystals

Metal salt crystals. Salts are compounds formed by reacting a metal or metal compound with an acid. Sodium chloride (centre) is also known as common, table or cooking salt

Background imageChemicals Collection: HUSG2A-00014

HUSG2A-00014
Chinese-American pharmacist weighing medicines in a Chinatown drugstore, San Francisco, 1890s Hand-colored halftone reproduction of a 19th-century illustration



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"Unveiling the Secrets: Exploring the Fascinating World of Chemicals" Dmitri Mendeleev's Legacy: The Father of the Periodic Table A Playful Caricature: The Periodic Table in Digital Illustration ICIS Imperial Image: Unraveling the Wonders Caffeine's Molecule: Unlocking the Power Behind Your Morning Brew Artistic Insight into Blood Coagulation Cascade, a Marvelous Biological Process (Artwork C016 / 9873) France and Bees: Navigating the Complex Relationship with Environmental Chemicals Black and White Chemistry Lab Chronicles - Witnessing a Male Pharmacist at Work (Picture No. 11014612) Rudolf II's Alchemist Journey - Delving into Historical Perspectives on Chemical Discoveries (Artwork C013 / 9565) Brave Heroes in Action - Firefighters Tackling Chemical Emergencies during WW2 in Mitcham, Surrey Victoria College, Alexandria - Where Chemistry Sparks Curiosity and Innovation in its Laboratory Montem Street Higher Elementary School, London.