Ernst Haeckel Print - Nautical Print Antique Science Print - Gorgeous High Quality Giclee Print - Beach House Decor Wall Art Ernst Heinrich Haeckel (1834-1919) was a biologist, naturalist, philosopher, physician, professor and artist. The published artwork of Haeckel includes over 100 detailed, multi-colour illustrations of animals and sea creatures (see: Kunstformen der Natur, ″Art Forms of Nature″). This item is a high-quality fine art reproduction of an original Ernst Haeckel nautical print. Printed on superior quality matte paper for beautiful texture and vibrant colours. Giclee prints are regarded as true fine-art reproductions, and we use the highest quality materials available today. Prints are carefully rolled and shipped in sturdy cardboard tube-mailers, or cardboard backed envelope-mailers. 15+ years in online selling experience. Satisfaction guaranteed. All orders are shipped out within 5 business days. If you’d like any adjustments made to the prints (colours, cropping, etc...) let us know! Up to 7 print sizes are available to purchase, designed to fit standard frames: 5x7″ - Standard print size (postcard) 8x10″ - Standard print size 11x14″ - Standard print size 12x16″ - Standard print size (Fits in IKEA RIBBA frames) 13x19″ - Standard print size 16x20″ - Standard print size 18x24″ - Standard print size If you're interested in ordering a size that isn't listed, please contact us. Please note, we sell unframed prints. IKEA RIBBA Prints are specifically sized for these two frames: https://www.ikea.com/ca/en/p/ribba-frame-white-90378427/ https://www.ikea.com/ca/en/p/ribba-frame-black-30378425/ Check out our store here: https://www.etsy.com/ca/shop/EncorePrintSociety?ref=l2-shopheader-name More antique nature prints here: https://www.etsy.com/ca/shop/EncorePrintSociety?section_id=17228200&ref=shopsection_leftnav_10 NAT192
The first centennial of one of the worst science fiction novels in history is …
Today's commercial's haven't got a thing on these relics! Tune in for some serious laughs!!
The Isolator is a bizarre helmet invented in 1925 that was used to help increase focus and concentration by rendering the wearer deaf, piping them full of
One of the most influential works of this century, The Myth of Sisyphus—featured here in a stand-alone edition—is a crucial exposition of existentialist thought. Influenced by works such as...
Austrian postcard by Iris Verlag, no. 5201. Blonde German actress Elga Brink (1906-1986) starred in many silent comedies since the middle of the 1920s, often directed by her partner Georg Jacoby. She also starred in dramatic productions such as the epic Quo vadis? (1925), the sex education film Dürfen wir schweigen (1926), the Stefan Zweig adaptation Angst (1928), the early sound film Das Land ohne Frauen (1929), and the science fiction film Der Tunnel (1933). For more postcards, a bio and clips check out our blog European Film Star Postcards Already over 3 million views! Or follow us at Tumblr or Pinterest.
Probably the first thing we learned about the internet once we started using it, was not to believe everything we read on the internet. However, with proper background and layout, some things look credible enough to sell you any information as the truth, so all that's left is to rely on your own judgment and research. Not in this case.
This heartbreaking image of Mrs M and her four young children in Birmingham is just one of 100 that were taken by photographer Nick Hedges in Britain's slums in the 1960s and 1970s.
PHOTOS: 17 Most Bizarre Medical Treatments
For Elisabeth Daynès, sculpting ancient humans and their ancestors is both an art and a science
On June 8th, a new exhibit curated by Tor’s own Irene Gallo and Orbit Books’ Lauren Panepinto opens at the Museum of American Illustration at the Society of Illustrators, turning a spotlight on the incredibly rich array of science fiction and fantasy art created by women, from established icons in the field to new and […]
The metadata below describe the original scanning. Follow the All Files: HTTP link in the View the book box to the left to find XML files that contain more...
Father of Computer Science. Single-handedly won World War II by cracking the Enigma code; dishonorably discharged afterwards for his open homosexuality. Disguised his suicide by eating a poisoned apple. Turing saved us all; in thanks, we killed him.
Photographic portraits taken by Dr. Hugh Welch Diamond of patients from Surrey County Asylum in England where he worked as a psychiatrist.
¿Locos o genios? Los científicos en la literatura Dossier elaborado por Christine Sétrin, con la colaboración de Ángel Pozo. ▲ Ilustración : Zeno. Después de pasar todo el año 2014 en las trinchera…
In 1970 the Scarfolk Crime Commission embarked on the largest study into crime to date. After two years of intense investigation it found a startling correlation between the types of people who commit crime and their early life experiences. The findings were unequivocal: 100% of criminals had also once been children. The council immediately put into effect acts intended to reduce, if not entirely eradicate this insidious cause of crime. Thousands of children were rounded up in camps. Toys were burnt in massive pyres. Adults were sterilised. Anyone who had been in regular contact with children, or had ever been a child, was quarantined in vast bunkers specially built several storeys below the council building. Though Scarfolk was reduced to a ghost town, the scheme proved a success. During the first month that these stringent measures had been implemented not one crime had been committed. Consequently, at the 1972 Conference of Sham Utopias, a local conservative MP predicted that the most successful towns, and even countries, of the future will be those that eradicate all citizens who have any connection to, or dealings with, children or the adults they grow into. For more about bad children, see: Brood parasites, Serious Infant Dental Assault, the Never Go with Strange Children campaign and the Infant Liberation Front terror group.
A stunning collection of vintage geography posters. Free geographical school charts by Levi Yaggy in 1893 are in the Public Domain.
Must-read books on the history, theory and practice of visual storytelling and computational art, recommended by the all-star speakers at the EyeO Festival of data visualization and computer arts.
Journalist Rebecca Skloot’s new book investigates how a poor black tobacco farmer had a groundbreaking impact on modern medicine
Ernst Haeckel Print - Nautical Print Antique Science Print - Gorgeous High Quality Giclee Print - Beach House Decor Wall Art Ernst Heinrich Haeckel (1834-1919) was a biologist, naturalist, philosopher, physician, professor and artist. The published artwork of Haeckel includes over 100 detailed, multi-colour illustrations of animals and sea creatures (see: Kunstformen der Natur, ″Art Forms of Nature″). This item is a high-quality fine art reproduction of an original Ernst Haeckel nautical print. Printed on superior quality matte paper for beautiful texture and vibrant colours. Giclee prints are regarded as true fine-art reproductions, and we use the highest quality materials available today. Prints are carefully rolled and shipped in sturdy cardboard tube-mailers, or cardboard backed envelope-mailers. 15+ years in online selling experience. Satisfaction guaranteed. All orders are shipped out within 5 business days. If you’d like any adjustments made to the prints (colours, cropping, etc...) let us know! Up to 7 print sizes are available to purchase, designed to fit standard frames: 5x7″ - Standard print size (postcard) 8x10″ - Standard print size 11x14″ - Standard print size 12x16″ - Standard print size (Fits in IKEA RIBBA frames) 13x19″ - Standard print size 16x20″ - Standard print size 18x24″ - Standard print size If you're interested in ordering a size that isn't listed, please contact us. Please note, we sell unframed prints. IKEA RIBBA Prints are specifically sized for these two frames: https://www.ikea.com/ca/en/p/ribba-frame-white-90378427/ https://www.ikea.com/ca/en/p/ribba-frame-black-30378425/ Check out our store here: https://www.etsy.com/ca/shop/EncorePrintSociety?ref=l2-shopheader-name More antique nature prints here: https://www.etsy.com/ca/shop/EncorePrintSociety?section_id=17228200&ref=shopsection_leftnav_10 NAT183
JF Ptak Science Books LLC These pamphlets are samples from a larger collection whose attention to the detail of boredom and blandness and relative inexplicability are extraordinary. The titles intact, it mostly doesn't matter what the contents have to say...
How one man took on the church
Hollerith is a name that you'll come across if you study computer science. Several concepts have been named after Herman Hollerith who invented an automated punch card tabulating machine. Herman Hollerith was one of the founders of a company that later became IBM. Hollerith's invention lead to the punched cards which were a big part of the day to day work of early professional computer programmers. Herman Hollerith was born on February 29th 1860 in Buffalo, New York. Yes, he had a leap day birthday, so we thought we'd better cover him today or we would have to wait another 4 years! We think it's important that kids understand the history of computing. Most western kids today grow up with internet at home and access to mobile technology. We've previously written about key tech innovators such as Ada Lovelace, George Boole, Grace Hopper and Thomas Edison. Hollerith originally invented his punch card machine for accurate data handling for the US census. (There had been punched cards before in use in weaving looms and musical instruments.) IBM progressed the use of punch card based machines and early general purpose computers were programmed with punch cards. Thanks to Hollerith, early computer programmers were able to capture their programs on physical punched cards that could be fed into a computer. This meant that programs could be prepared in advance and modified by adding, removing or physically editting cards. Punch Card Early computer programmers didn't have the benefit of being able to run their code immediately. They would have to write the whole thing and then submit it when they got a slot on a computer. It was very annoying if it had a bug. Throughout my career I met lots of people who had used punched cards in their job. The legacy of punched cards was very strong in the layout of the FORTRAN programming language that I used in one of my early jobs. If you want to see a punch card preparation machine then watch Bubble Whiting's fantastic demonstration and explanation of how she used one in her job: In this video Professor Brailsford explains how punch cards, or Hollerith cards, work and shares his experience of using them: In these days of fantastic browser based coding sites for kids, Hollerith cards look really hard work! But they were a significant step towards coding becoming accessible.
Lennart Nilsson, suédois né en 1922, est un de ces photographes qui ne laisse pas insensible. Pionnier de la photographie médicale, il expérimente les nouvelles...
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The game of kings is a mainstay of science fiction and fantasy. Sometimes it’s on screen or on the page, and sometimes it's an influencing factor. Here are 22 famous examples.
In Netflix’s “Daredevil” series, a 2015 adaptation of a 1960s Marvel comic, flashbacks reveal that an accident blinding a boy also enhances his othe...