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Some of the five members of the Literary Greenland Expedition (1902–1904) are shown: Harald Moltke, Ludvig Mylius?Erichsen, Knud Rasmussen, Alfred Bertelsen and Jørgen Brønlund. The Danish expedition aimed to document Greenlandic culture, language and Arctic life through ethnography, literature and scientific observation. | Some of the five members of the Literary Greenland Expedition (1902–1904) are shown: Harald Moltke, Ludvig Mylius?Erichsen, Knud Rasmussen, Alfred Bertelsen and Jørgen Brønlund. The Danish expedition aimed to document Greenlandic culture, language and Arctic life through et-stock-foto
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Sharp view showcasing botanical intricacies and artistic potential. Macro image emphasizing petal surface with artistic bokeh effect and fine detail-stock-foto
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Eulophia guineensis, an orchid species native to tropical Africa and parts of the Arabian Peninsula. Curtis's botanical magazine, 19th century.-stock-foto
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Scilla esculenta (now known as Camassia scilloides), commonly called Wild Hyacinth, Eastern Camass, or Atlantic Camass. Curtis's botanical magazine, 19th century.-stock-foto
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A vintage botanical illustration of Eschscholzia tenuifolia (Slender Goldfields) from the 19th century. The hand-colored engraving details the plant's yellow flowers, roots, and anatomical dissections for scientific study.-stock-foto
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An antique botanical illustration of Hoya linearis, or wax plant, from a 19th-century volume of Curtis's botanical magazine. The hand-colored engraving details the plant's trailing stems, narrow foliage, and star-shaped flowers, along with close-up diagrams.-stock-foto
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Preserved mimosa sprig for botanical study, detailed branches and silvery foliage, archival vibe and scientific reference with textured backdrop.-stock-foto
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Edward Charles Pickering and the Harvard Computers in front of the Harvard College Observatory building in 1913. Henrietta Leavitt is in the center, in front of Pickering.-stock-foto
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A vintage portrait of Louis Pasteur, the 19th-century French chemist and microbiologist. He is famous for pioneering germ theory, developing pasteurization, and creating vaccines for diseases like rabies, profoundly impacting modern medicine and public health.-stock-foto
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The title page of the 1925 first edition of F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel, The Great Gatsby. It displays the author's name, publisher Charles Scribner's Sons, publication year, and the famous epigraph.-stock-foto
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Stack of Kodachrome colour camera slides on white background, classic photographic film media-stock-foto
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Fashion plate, 1852, from the Swedish periodical Stockholms Mode-Journal, illustrating Paris-influenced promenade and evening dress with tartan trimming and Mathilde cap. Figures wear velvet jackets with mousquetaire cuffs, sarsenet waistcoats, tulle overdresses embroidered with silver stars and flounced skirts with ribbon bands. Period terms include Mathilde cap, sarsenet, jacket-bodice, mousquetaire cuffs, over-dress, flounces and passementerie.-stock-foto
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Richard Adolf Zsigmondy, Richard Adolf Zsigmondy (Hungarian: Zsigmondy Richárd Adolf; 1 April 1865 – 23 September 1929) was an Austrian-born chemist. He was known for his research in colloids, for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1925, as well as for co-inventing the slit-ultramicroscope,[1] and different membrane filters. The crater Zsigmondy on the Moon is named in his honour.-stock-foto
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Experimental use of the radio knife for surgical operations in Chicago, United States. 1920 - This image documents early medical experiments in Chicago involving the use of a radio knife, an innovative surgical technique that employed radiofrequency or radiation-based technology to perform precise operations. Such experiments, widely reported in the press in the early 20th century, reflect the rapid advances in medical science and surgical technology, particularly in the United States, where hospitals and research centers were at the forefront of modern clinical innovation.-stock-foto
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The Wow! signal is a strong narrowband radio signal detected on August 15, 1977 and recorded in the original computer printout at Ohio State University's Big Ear radio telescope in the United States.  An astronomer reviewing the data circled a particularly strong signal and wrote 'Wow!' on the printout.  It is often cited as evidence in support of the existence of extraterrestrial intelligence although it is now believed to have been caused by comet 266/P Christensen.-stock-foto
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Reticularia umbrina is a slime mould species historically recorded in 19th century British mycological studies. The archival image documents a watercolour and pen and ink drawing from the Reverend Richard Cresswell collection, with identification added in ink by a RAMM curator known as Miss Aviolet and stamped CRESSWELL COLLECTION. The historical photographic print records this scientific illustration for preservation.-stock-foto
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Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman and amateur mycologist who assembled a large collection of fungal illustrations. Fungus drawing Arcyria punicea is dated 1870 and is part of the Cresswell Collection with identifications by Miss Aviolet. The archival image records a watercolour, pen and ink study on paper.-stock-foto
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Hypoxylon hypoxylon is a species of fungus that grows on decaying wood and is recorded in nineteenth century natural history. The archival image records a dated 1846 watercolour and ink scientific drawing from the Cresswell Collection by Reverend Richard Cresswell (1815–1882), an English clergyman and naturalist. The historical photographic print preserves the specimen illustration for biological classification.-stock-foto
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Hypomyces ochraceus is a fungal species described in nineteenth century mycological studies. The archival image records a dated 1865 watercolour and ink scientific drawing from the Cresswell Collection by Reverend Richard Cresswell (1815–1882), an English clergyman and natural history collector of fungi. The historical photographic print preserves the specimen illustration for taxonomic research.-stock-foto
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Hypomyces chrysospermus is a parasitic fungus that grows on other mushrooms and is documented in nineteenth century mycological research. The archival image records a dated 1868 watercolour and ink scientific drawing from the Cresswell Collection by Reverend Richard Cresswell (1815–1882), an English clergyman and natural history collector. The historical photographic print preserves the specimen study for fungal classification.-stock-foto
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Lachnea scutellata is a cup fungus species studied in nineteenth century mycological classification. The archival image records a dated 1869 watercolour and ink scientific drawing from the Cresswell Collection by Reverend Richard Cresswell (1815–1882), an English clergyman and collector of fungal specimens. The historical photographic print preserves the biological illustration for research reference.-stock-foto
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Peziza venosa is a cup fungus examined by nineteenth-century naturalists studying fungal classification. Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman and amateur mycologist known for assembling illustrated fungi records preserved by the Royal Albert Memorial Museum. The archival image documents a photographic reproduction of an 1872 annotated watercolour and ink study with curator identification markings.-stock-foto
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Peziza venosa is a cup fungus species described within nineteenth-century European mycology. Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman who created extensive illustrated fungal studies later preserved in museum collections. The archival image records a photographic reproduction of an 1869 annotated watercolour and ink drawing, including identification text written by curator Miss Aviolet.-stock-foto
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Peziza venosa is a species of cup fungus recorded in nineteenth-century British mycological study. Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman and amateur mycologist who assembled a large fungi research collection later preserved at the Royal Albert Memorial Museum. The archival image documents a photographic reproduction of an annotated watercolour and ink study bearing identification notes added by curator Miss Aviolet.-stock-foto
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Peziza vesiculosa is a cup fungus species documented in nineteenth-century European mycological literature. Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman and amateur mycologist who assembled illustrated fungal studies later preserved by the Royal Albert Memorial Museum. The archival image documents a photographic reproduction of an 1872 annotated watercolour and ink illustration identified by curator Miss Aviolet.-stock-foto
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Helvella crispa is a species of fungus commonly known as the white saddle, studied in nineteenth century mycology. The archival image records a watercolour and ink scientific drawing from the Cresswell Collection by Reverend Richard Cresswell (1815–1882), an English clergyman and natural history collector of fungal specimens. The historical photographic print preserves the specimen illustration for taxonomic reference.-stock-foto
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Tremella foliacea is a fungus documented in a historical photographic print by Miss M M Clarke, with identification by Miss Aviolet. The archival image is part of the Cresswell Collection, containing over 450 drawings and photographs of fungi collected by Richard Cresswell and curated at RAMM for scientific and educational purposes.-stock-foto
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Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman and amateur mycologist who compiled over 450 fungal drawings and photographs. In 1847 he created a study identified as Auricularia aivicula, later annotated by Miss Aviolet and stamped CRESSWELL COLLECTION at RAMM. The archival image records a watercolour, pen and ink drawing on paper from his bound fungi volumes.-stock-foto
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Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman and amateur mycologist who assembled a large collection of fungal studies. In 1871 he produced a drawing identified as Auricularia aivicula, later annotated by Miss Aviolet of the RAMM and stamped CRESSWELL COLLECTION. The archival image documents a watercolour, pen and ink study on paper from his fungi volumes.-stock-foto
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Phragmidium mucronatum and Phragmidium bulbosum are rust fungi associated with plant hosts and studied within nineteenth-century botanical pathology. Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman who compiled extensive fungal illustration collections preserved in museum holdings. The archival image records a photographic reproduction of an 1869 annotated watercolour and ink study bearing curator identification by Miss Aviolet.-stock-foto
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Stereum purpureum is a fungus documented in a historical photographic print by Miss M M Clarke, with identification by Miss Aviolet. The archival image is part of the Cresswell Collection, which contains over 450 drawings and photographs of fungi collected by Richard Cresswell and curated at RAMM for scientific and educational purposes.-stock-foto
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Stereum purpureum is a fungus documented in a historical photographic print by Miss M M Clarke, with identification by Miss Aviolet. The archival image is part of the Cresswell Collection, which includes over 450 drawings and photographs of fungi collected by Richard Cresswell and curated at RAMM for scientific and educational purposes.-stock-foto
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Stereum purpureum is a fungus documented in a historical photographic print by Miss M M Clarke, with identification by Miss Aviolet. The archival image is part of the Cresswell Collection, which includes over 450 drawings and photographs of fungi collected by Richard Cresswell and curated at RAMM for scientific and educational purposes.-stock-foto
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Phylacteria purpureum is a fungal taxon recorded in nineteenth-century mycological classification systems. Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman who compiled extensive illustrated fungi collections later preserved at the Royal Albert Memorial Museum. The archival image records a photographic reproduction of an 1865 annotated watercolour and ink study including curator identifications written by Miss Aviolet.-stock-foto
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Phylacteria terrestris is a fungal taxon studied within nineteenth-century European mycology. Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman who produced extensive illustrated records of fungi preserved at the Royal Albert Memorial Museum. The archival image records a photographic reproduction of an 1867 annotated watercolour and ink study containing curator identification notes by Miss Aviolet.-stock-foto
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Phylacteria purpureum is a fungal species referenced in nineteenth-century botanical classification studies. Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman and amateur mycologist who assembled extensive illustrated fungi collections preserved in museum archives. The archival image documents a photographic reproduction of an 1867 annotated watercolour and ink drawing with curator identification by Miss Aviolet.-stock-foto
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Mordecai Cubitt Cooke (1825–1914) was a British mycologist and author of Mycographia seu Icones Fungorum published in 1879. The archival image records Plate 44 titled LEOTIA, listing species including L lubrica, L circinans, L viscosa, and L chlorocephala. The historical photographic print documents a printed paper plate from Part 1 of his illustrated fungi compendium.-stock-foto
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Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman and amateur mycologist who compiled an extensive collection of fungal studies. Blushing rosette fungus is dated 1847 and forms part of the Cresswell Collection, with identifications added by curator Miss Aviolet. The archival image documents a watercolour, pen and ink drawing on paper.-stock-foto
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Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman and amateur mycologist who compiled extensive fungal studies. In 1873 he produced an unidentified fungus drawing later annotated by Miss Aviolet and stamped CRESSWELL COLLECTION at RAMM. The archival image records a watercolour, pen and ink study on paper from his bound volumes.-stock-foto
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Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman and amateur mycologist who produced numerous fungal drawings. In 1868 he created an unidentified fungus study later annotated by Miss Aviolet and stamped CRESSWELL COLLECTION at RAMM. The archival image records a watercolour, pen and ink illustration on paper from his bound volumes.-stock-foto