405 results filtered with: Green
- Digital Images
- Online
Geranium maderense Yeo Geraniaceae Tender evergreen biennial. Madeira cranesbill. Distribution: Madeira. Solely grown for its spectacular flowers. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Varicose Veins, Legs. Female. Illustrated with thermography
Thermal Vision Research, Wellcome Collection- Digital Images
- Online
Colour vision
Paul Griggs- Digital Images
- Online
Bipolar neurone in the midbrain of an adult zebrafish, LM
Dr Mónica Folgueira- Digital Images
- Online
Coccolithophore
Dr David Furness- Digital Images
- Online
Raynaud's Phenomenon
Thermal Vision Research- Digital Images
- Online
Epidural anaesthesia, artwork
Mary Rouncefield- Books
Green : the history of a color / Michel Pastoureau ; translated by Jody Gladding.
Pastoureau, Michel, 1947-Date: [2014]- Digital Images
- Online
Agapostemon, anterior view
Macroscopic Solutions- Digital Images
- Online
Bacterial microbiome mapping, bioartistic experiment
François-Joseph Lapointe, Université de Montréal- Digital Images
- Online
Illicium verum Hook.f. Illiciaceae Chinese Star Anise Distribution: China. Illicium anisatum Japanese Star Anise. Distribution Japan. Illicium verum is used as a spice in Asian cooking and for Star Anise tea. The distilled oil is added to cough mixture used by children. Introduced to Europe in 1588 (Pharmacographia Indica, 1890). Illicium anisatum syn. religiosum, has been confused with it (Lindley, 1838, Bentley 1861) but is poisonous and was used to make incense in Japanese and Chinese temples. It was called Skimi by Kaempfer. The seed pods of both species contain shikimic acid (the name being derived from the Japanese word for the plant - shi-kimi) from which Tamiflu, the antiviral drug was synthesised. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Acacia melanoxylon R.Br. Mimosaceae. Australian Blackwood. Tree. Distribution: Eastern Australia. Tree. Invasive weed in South Africa, Portugal, California. Local uses: analgesic. Causes allergic contact dermatitis due to 2,6,dimethoxybenzoquinone. Pinnate leaves of young plant drop off and phylloclades are formed instead. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Wild-type Muscle Sarcomere, Drosophila larva
Hermann Aberle, University of Munster- Digital Images
- Online
Platanus orientalis subsp insularis
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
GABAergic and Glutamatergic neurons in the zebrafish brain
Kate Turner, Dr Steve Wilson- Digital Images
- Online
Ambulance on route to an emergency call out, UK.
Adrian Wressell, Heart of England NHS FT- Digital Images
- Online
Kidney stone
Sergio Bertazzo, Imperial College London; Dominique Bazin, UPMC; Chantal Jouanneau, INSERM.- Digital Images
- Online
Cellular architecture of normal human skin imaged by whole mount tissue microscopy. Human skin has a rich network of white blood cells (specifically dendritic cells, T cells and macrophages) which form sheaths around blood vessels. This image was taken less than 20 micrometres beneath the junction that joins the dermal and epidermal layers of the skin (dermo-epidermal junction). At this level, dendritic cells (stained for CD11c; green) form clusters around and between blood capillary loops (stained for CD31; red). The blind-ended tips of initial lymphatic vessels are just visible (stained for LYVE-1; blue) at this level. This normal cellular architecture is grossly disrupted in diseased skin (see related images). Scale bar (white) represents 200 micrometres.
Dr. Xiao-nong Wang, Human Dendritic Cell Laboratory, Newcastle University- Digital Images
- Online
Borago officinalis (Borage, Star flower)
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Apple, sagittal view, MRI
Alexandr Khrapichev, University of Oxford- Digital Images
- Online
Synthetic DNA channel transporting cargo across membranes
Michael Northrop- Digital Images
- Online
Robber fly (Asilidae)
Macroscopic Solutions- Digital Images
- Online
Ginkgo leaf
Macroscopic Solutions- Digital Images
- Online
Cellular architecture of normal human skin imaged by whole mount tissue microscopy. Human skin has a rich network of white blood cells (specifically dendritic cells, T cells and macrophages) which form sheaths around blood vessels. In this image, T cells (stained for CD3; red) dendritic cells (stained for MHC class II; green) and macrophages (stained for LYVE-1; blue with some cells showing a tinge of green) can be seen. Cell nuclei have been stained with DAPI (grey). This normal cellular architecture is grossly disrupted in diseased skin (see related images). X10 magnification. Scale bar (white) represents 200 micrometres.
Dr. Xiao-nong Wang, Human Dendritic Cell Laboratory, Newcastle University- Digital Images
- Online
Kiwi, sagittal view, MRI
Alexandr Khrapichev, University of Oxford