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Die Cephalopoden. Bd. 18, T.1 (Atlas) [Jena],G. Fischer,1910-1915. biodiversitylibrary.org/page/13598408
Jimmy Nelson Jimmy Nelson Barga & Hammarech, Banna Tribe, Bori Village, Southern Omo Valley, Ethiopia, 2011 Chromogenic print Request print details Jimmy Nelson Jimmy Nelson Paraque National Los Glaciares, Cerro Pietrobelli, Patagonia Argentina, 2011 Chromogenic print Request print details Jimmy Nelson Jimmy Nelson Tumbu, Hangu, Peter, Hapiya, Kati, Hengene & Steven Huli Wigmen, Ambua Falls, […]
From the Swallowtail Garden Seeds collection of botanical photographs and illustrations. We hope you will enjoy these images as much as we do.
The granddaddy of English geoglyphs dates back to the late Bronze Age.
In 1898, Carl Chun, a German marine biologist, set off on the steamboat Valdivia to explore the deep ocean on a yearlong voyage along the West Coast of South Africa, the Gulf of Guinea, the Antarctic Sea, and part of the Indian Ocean. He and his colleagues collected, writes the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), “as … Continue reading "Marine Biologist Carl Chun, Discoverer of the ‘Vampire Squid’ Publishes the First, Fully-Illustrated Atlas of Cephalopods in 1910"
Bangkok's men with dangerous jobs come here in search of protective talismans.
New Zealand’s repatriation program brings human remains back and lays them to rest.
In 1898, Carl Chun, a German marine biologist, set off on the steamboat Valdivia to explore the deep ocean on a yearlong voyage along the West Coast of South Africa, the Gulf of Guinea, the Antarctic Sea, and part of the Indian Ocean. He and his colleagues collected, writes the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), “as … Continue reading "Marine Biologist Carl Chun, Discoverer of the ‘Vampire Squid’ Publishes the First, Fully-Illustrated Atlas of Cephalopods in 1910"
Hyginus' Poeticon Astronomicon is a star atlas and book of stories whose text is attributed to 'Hyginus', though the true authorship is disputed. During the Renaissance, the work was attributed to the Roman historian Gaius Julius Hyginus who lived during the 1st century BC, however, the fact that the book lists most of the constellations north of the ecliptic in the same order as Ptolemy's Almagest (written in the 2nd century AD) has led many to believe that the text was created by a more recent Hyginus. The text describes 47 of the 48 Ptolemaic constellations, centering primarily on the
The self-mummified monks of Japan.
No one knows who made them or why.
Atlas der Alpenflora /. Wien :Eigenthum und Verlag des Deutschen und Oesterr. Alpenvereins,1882.. biodiversitylibrary.org/page/10384574
In 1898, Carl Chun, a German marine biologist, set off on the steamboat Valdivia to explore the deep ocean on a yearlong voyage along the West Coast of South Africa, the Gulf of Guinea, the Antarctic Sea, and part of the Indian Ocean. He and his colleagues collected, writes the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), “as … Continue reading "Marine Biologist Carl Chun, Discoverer of the ‘Vampire Squid’ Publishes the First, Fully-Illustrated Atlas of Cephalopods in 1910"