173 results filtered with: Brown
- Digital Images
- Online
Male jumping spider (possibly Platycryptus undatus)
Macroscopic Solutions- Digital Images
- Online
Brown marmorated stink bug (Halyomorpha halys)
Macroscopic Solutions- Digital Images
- Online
Antique brain tissue, St Elizabeth's Hospital, Washington DC
Jon Malis- Digital Images
- Online
Knot in hair
Macroscopic Solutions- Digital Images
- Online
Antique brain tissue, St Elizabeth's Hospital, Washington DC
Jon Malis- Digital Images
- Online
Chronic laminitis in horse hoof
Michael Frank, Royal Veterinary College- Digital Images
- Online
Canine head, dissected to reveal the salivary glands
Michael Frank, Royal Veterinary College- Digital Images
- Online
Thigh bone (femur) from a male Japanese quail, micro-CT
Justyna Miszkiewicz, Jayashree Chakraborty, John Logan, Duncan Bassett, Graham Williams, Imperial College London- Digital Images
- Online
Rat neurones, SEM
Anne Weston, Francis Crick Institute- Digital Images
- Online
Hair brain sculpture
Jackie Brown- Digital Images
- Online
Ultrastructure inside a macrophage cell, TEM
Kevin Mackenzie, University of Aberdeen- Digital Images
- Online
Fetus and discoid placenta, monkey
Michael Frank, Royal Veterinary College- Digital Images
- Online
Grass seed covered in bacteria from infected dog's paw
Anne Weston, Francis Crick Institute- Digital Images
- Online
Human heart (mitral valve) tissue displaying calcification
Sergio Bertazzo, Department of Materials, Imperial College London- Digital Images
- Online
Carthamus tinctorius L. Asteraceae. Safe Flower, False Saffron - Distribution: W. Asia. Dioscorides (in Beck, 2003) notes the seeds as a purgative, but also advises it made up with 30 figs, which must have helped. Gerard (1640) calls it Atractylis flore luteo the yellow distaffe thistle. and follows Dioscorides in its uses, but does get the reader confused with Cnicus benedictus, calling both plants 'wild bastard saffron'. Culpeper makes no mention of it in his early works, but later (1826) have the following: ‘Wild Saffon, or Saf-flower ... accounted a pretty strong cathartic [causing diarrhoea and vomiting], evacuating tough viscid phlegm, both upwards and downwards, and by that means is said to clear the lungs, and help the phthisic [now equated with tuberculosis]. It is likewise serviceable against the jaundice
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Antique brain tissue, St Elizabeth's Hospital, Washington DC
Jon Malis- Digital Images
- Online
Human stem cell embedded in a 3D matrix, Cryo SEM
Sílvia A Ferreira, Cristina Lopo and Eileen Gentleman, KCL- Digital Images
- Online
Silk moth antenna
David Linstead- Digital Images
- Online
Cell walls in a Quercus (oak) stem, LM
Fernán Federici- Digital Images
- Online
Antique brain tissue, St Elizabeth's Hospital, Washington DC
Jon Malis- Digital Images
- Online
Chocolate wafer snack
Macroscopic Solutions- Digital Images
- Online
Tapeworm cyst in a sheep brain
Michael Frank, Royal Veterinary College- Digital Images
- Online
Mamamania: An artistic interpretation of Alzheimer's Disease
Florence Winterflood- Digital Images
- Online
Leishmania mexicana parasites in the amastigote stage, SEM
University of Oxford, Richard Wheeler- Digital Images
- Online
'More to love' Adipose tissue
Odra Noel