Editorial actual & illustrations

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Local Artist painting of the tree of life and the native culture at the Tucson Museum of Art, Arizona-stock-photo
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Local Artist painting of the tree of life and the native culture at the Tucson Museum of Art, Arizona-stock-photo
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Tainan City, Taiwan – Jun 29 2025: Lifelike sculpture of a family riding a vintage motorcycle suspended from the ceiling at the National Museum of Tai-stock-photo
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Tainan City, Taiwan – Jun 29 2025: Lifelike sculpture of a family riding a vintage motorcycle suspended from the ceiling at the National Museum of Tai-stock-photo
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Tainan City, Taiwan – Jun 29 2025: Lifelike sculpture of a family riding a vintage motorcycle suspended from the ceiling at the National Museum of Tai-stock-photo
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Gongju City, South Korea - June 13th 2025: A statue of a prehistoric child gently petting a dog stands on the grassy hill near the Geum River at Seokj-stock-photo
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Gongju City, South Korea - June 13th 2025: Life-sized models of a saber-toothed cat and prehistoric hunter decorate the rooftop of the Seokjangni Muse-stock-photo
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WASHINGTON DC, United States — The 'Two Georges' exhibition in the Southwest Exhibition Gallery on the second floor of the Library of Congress's Thomas Jefferson Building explores the parallel lives of George Washington and King George III. The exhibit brings together Washington's papers from the Library of Congress, George III's scientific instruments from London's Science Museum Group, and documents from the Royal Collection and Royal Archives. Despite being traditionally viewed as opponents, the exhibition reveals their shared interests in science and agriculture, and examines how both men-stock-photo
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WASHINGTON DC, United States — The 'Two Georges' exhibition in the Southwest Exhibition Gallery on the second floor of the Library of Congress's Thomas Jefferson Building explores the parallel lives of George Washington and King George III. The exhibit brings together Washington's papers from the Library of Congress, George III's scientific instruments from London's Science Museum Group, and documents from the Royal Collection and Royal Archives. Despite being traditionally viewed as opponents, the exhibition reveals their shared interests in science and agriculture, and examines how both men-stock-photo
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WASHINGTON DC, United States — The 'Two Georges' exhibition in the Southwest Exhibition Gallery on the second floor of the Library of Congress's Thomas Jefferson Building explores the parallel lives of George Washington and King George III. The exhibit brings together Washington's papers from the Library of Congress, George III's scientific instruments from London's Science Museum Group, and documents from the Royal Collection and Royal Archives. Despite being traditionally viewed as opponents, the exhibition reveals their shared interests in science and agriculture, and examines how both men-stock-photo
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WASHINGTON DC, United States — The 'Two Georges' exhibition in the Southwest Exhibition Gallery on the second floor of the Library of Congress's Thomas Jefferson Building explores the parallel lives of George Washington and King George III. The exhibit brings together Washington's papers from the Library of Congress, George III's scientific instruments from London's Science Museum Group, and documents from the Royal Collection and Royal Archives. Despite being traditionally viewed as opponents, the exhibition reveals their shared interests in science and agriculture, and examines how both men-stock-photo
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WASHINGTON DC, United States — The 'Two Georges' exhibition at the Library of Congress's Thomas Jefferson Building features rare documents highlighting the parallel lives of George Washington and King George III. Displayed items include Washington's handwritten copy of 'Rules of Civility' from 1747, Augustine Washington's 1743 will bequeathing enslaved people to his son, and instructions written in 1749 by Frederick, Prince of Wales, to the future George III. The exhibition challenges common myths about both leaders by showcasing original manuscripts that reveal their formative influences, sha-stock-photo
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WASHINGTON DC, United States — The 'Two Georges' exhibition in the Southwest Exhibition Gallery on the second floor of the Library of Congress's Thomas Jefferson Building explores the parallel lives of George Washington and King George III. The exhibit brings together Washington's papers from the Library of Congress, George III's scientific instruments from London's Science Museum Group, and documents from the Royal Collection and Royal Archives. Despite being traditionally viewed as opponents, the exhibition reveals their shared interests in science and agriculture, and examines how both men-stock-photo
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WASHINGTON DC, United States — The 'Two Georges' exhibition in the Southwest Exhibition Gallery on the second floor of the Library of Congress's Thomas Jefferson Building explores the parallel lives of George Washington and King George III. The exhibit brings together Washington's papers from the Library of Congress, George III's scientific instruments from London's Science Museum Group, and documents from the Royal Collection and Royal Archives. Despite being traditionally viewed as opponents, the exhibition reveals their shared interests in science and agriculture, and examines how both men-stock-photo
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Life-size fiberglass-reinforced busts of ten pioneering Indian women scientists - at the Birla Industrial and Technological Museum in Kolkata, India.-stock-photo
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Life-size fiberglass-reinforced busts of ten pioneering Indian women scientists - at the Birla Industrial and Technological Museum in Kolkata, India.-stock-photo
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Cascais Portugal May 1 2025 Families visit outdoor Dino on the Road exhibit featuring realistic dinosaur models in park setting-stock-photo
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International Bomber Command Centre Anderson Shelter Opened in 2018, the International Bomber Command Centre (IBCC) is a memorial and interpretation c-stock-photo
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Fatima, Portugal - March 24, 2025: A framed historical photograph showing village life in Aljustrel, near Fatima, Portugal.-stock-photo
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Warsaw, Poland - March 22, 2025: Historic industrial equipment displayed in a modern urban environment in Warsaw, Poland-stock-photo
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Lviv, Ukraine - April 06, 2025: Historical panels on a fence depict cities' destruction and their reconstruction stories.-stock-photo
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NEW YORK CITY, United States — The American Museum of Natural History displays this impressive Megaloceros giganteus (Irish Elk) skeleton in the transition between the David H. Koch Dinosaur Wing and the Lila Acheson Wallace Wing of Mammals and Their Extinct Relatives. Collected from a peat bog near Limerick, Ireland, and gifted to the museum by Albert S. Bickmore in 1872, this specimen represents one of the last populations of this species that lived approximately 11,000 years ago during the late Pleistocene era. Despite its common name, this extinct giant deer was widely distributed across E-stock-photo
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NEW YORK CITY, United States — The American Museum of Natural History displays this Phascolonus gigas (giant wombat) skeleton cast in the transition area between the David H. Koch Dinosaur Wing and the Lila Acheson Wallace Wing of Mammals and Their Extinct Relatives. Collected in 1970 by C. E. Ray from Lake Callabonna, South Australia, this marsupial fossil lived approximately 100,000 years ago during the late Pleistocene era. The exhibit highlights both marsupial dental features with triangular cusps for efficient chewing and unique taphonomic evidence: a footprint left by Diprotodon, an even-stock-photo
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NEW YORK CITY, United States — The David H. Koch Dinosaur Wing houses one of the world's greatest collections of fossil dinosaurs at the American Museum of Natural History. Named after philanthropist David H. Koch who donated $20 million to the museum in 2006, this wing spans multiple exhibition halls dedicated to vertebrate evolution and prehistoric life. The collection includes iconic specimens like the Tyrannosaurus rex, Apatosaurus, and Stegosaurus skeletons, showcasing over 165 million years of dinosaur history.-stock-photo
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NEW YORK CITY, United States — The American Museum of Natural History displays this Phascolonus gigas (giant wombat) skeleton cast in the transition area between the David H. Koch Dinosaur Wing and the Lila Acheson Wallace Wing of Mammals and Their Extinct Relatives. Collected in 1970 by C. E. Ray from Lake Callabonna, South Australia, this marsupial fossil lived approximately 100,000 years ago during the late Pleistocene era. The exhibit highlights both marsupial dental features with triangular cusps for efficient chewing and unique taphonomic evidence: a footprint left by Diprotodon, an even-stock-photo
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NEW YORK CITY, United States — The David H. Koch Dinosaur Wing houses one of the world's greatest collections of fossil dinosaurs at the American Museum of Natural History. Named after philanthropist David H. Koch who donated $20 million to the museum in 2006, this wing spans multiple exhibition halls dedicated to vertebrate evolution and prehistoric life. The collection includes iconic specimens like the Tyrannosaurus rex, Apatosaurus, and Stegosaurus skeletons, showcasing over 165 million years of dinosaur history.-stock-photo
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NEW YORK CITY, United States — Mounted grasshopper specimens are displayed in the Susan and Peter J. Solomon Family Insectarium at the American Museum of Natural History. The collection showcases the diversity of Orthoptera, the order including grasshoppers, locusts, and crickets, with specimens carefully pinned and labeled for scientific study and public education. These preserved insects demonstrate variations in size, coloration, and anatomical adaptations across different grasshopper species from various global habitats.-stock-photo
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NEW YORK CITY, United States — Mounted grasshopper specimens are displayed in the Susan and Peter J. Solomon Family Insectarium at the American Museum of Natural History. The collection showcases the diversity of Orthoptera, the order including grasshoppers, locusts, and crickets, with specimens carefully pinned and labeled for scientific study and public education. These preserved insects demonstrate variations in size, coloration, and anatomical adaptations across different grasshopper species from various global habitats.-stock-photo
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James Caird replica boat in the South Georgia Museum, Grytviken, South Georgia-stock-photo
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London, England, Detail, The Natural History Museum, Egyptian Cat Mummies, Unusual Objects on display inside, Animal Mummies Collection-stock-photo
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London, England, Detail, The Natural History Museum, Egyptian Cat Mummies, Unusual Objects on display inside, Animal Mummies Collection, Egypt-stock-photo
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London, England, Detail, The Natural History Museum, Objects on display inside, Egyptian Mummies Collection, Ancient Civilisations-stock-photo
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London, England, Detail, The Natural History Museum, Objects on display inside, Egyptian Mummies Collection, Ancient Civilisations, Egypt-stock-photo
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London, England, Detail, The Natural History Museum, Objects on display inside, Egyptian Mummies Collection, Ancient Civilizations-stock-photo
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London, England, Detail, unusual Objects, on display inside, Egyptian Mummies Collection, 'Gebelein Man » The Natural History Museum-stock-photo
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London, England, Detail, unusual Objects, on display inside, Egyptian Mummies Collection, 'Gebelein Man » The Natural History Museum-stock-photo
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London, England, Crowd People Visiting, Tourists, The Natural History Museum; Detail, on display inside, Egyptian Mummies Collection, Ancient-stock-photo
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London, England, Detail, Natural History Museum, on display inside, Egyptian Mummies Collection, Ancient Art, Egyptian Museum-stock-photo
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London, England, Crowd People Visiting, Tourists, The Natural History Museum; Detail, on display inside, Egyptian Mummies Collection, Ancient-stock-photo
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Flowers in a Vase by Henri Fantin Latour. Still Life of Nigellas and Tea roses. At the Legion of Honor Art Museum in San Francisco, California.-stock-photo