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ink labeled research specimen képek

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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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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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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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Psaliota campestris is a historical scientific name applied to the field mushroom studied in nineteenth-century mycology. Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman who assembled extensive illustrated fungi collections preserved at the Royal Albert Memorial Museum. The archival image records a photographic reproduction of an 1868 annotated watercolour and ink study with identification notes added by curator Miss Aviolet.-stock-foto
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Pluteus leonius is a mushroom species recorded in nineteenth-century European mycological documentation. Richard Cresswell (1815–1882) was an English clergyman and amateur mycologist who compiled illustrated fungal studies later preserved by the Royal Albert Memorial Museum. The archival image documents a photographic reproduction of an 1881 annotated watercolour and ink illustration identified by curator Miss Aviolet.-stock-foto
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. kend  166 Kend - Print - Iconographia Zoologica - Special Collections University of Amsterdam - UBAINV0274 027 23 0002-stock-foto
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Philip Henry Gosse (1810–1888) was an English naturalist and author known for popularizing the marine aquarium. Bellidia huntii refers to a shrimp species he studied and illustrated from life. The archival image records a signed natural history drawing with labeled studies attributed to Gosse.-stock-foto
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Philip Henry Gosse (1810–1888) was an English naturalist known for studies of marine invertebrates along the Devonshire coast. Pedicellina belgica, now accepted as Barentsia gracilis, is a species in the phylum Entoprocta. The drawing includes annotations such as Catharina coronata and identifying letters for individual figures. This archival image records Gosse’s comparative scientific illustration related to his published works.-stock-foto
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Philip Henry Gosse (1810–1888) was an English naturalist and marine biologist who described numerous invertebrate species. Pachygnathus notops is an aquatic mite first described by Gosse in 1855. The 1855 drawing bears ink inscriptions including the species name and the signature “”P H Gosse del ad viv.”” This archival image documents his scientific illustration produced the same year as the species description.-stock-foto