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Waterloo Underground Station - cross-section 1926Cross section of Waterloo Overground and Underground Stations - showing the big triple escalator descending to the lower platforms. 1926
A cross-section of the Williamsburg Bridge, a suspension bridge connecting Manhattan with Brooklyn which was opened in December 1903
Section of the Thames EmbankmentA section of the Thames Embankment, taken by the Charing Cross railway bridge, showing; (1) the subway, designed to hold the gas pipes, the water pipes, perhaps the telegraph wires
Cross-sections and plans of blast furnaces, early 19th century. Copperplate engraving by Wilson Lowry from Abraham Rees Cyclopedia or Universal Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and Literature, Longman
By Ferry or Tunnel to France - Factors for and againstBy Ferry or Tunnel to France: Factors in the Transport Problem. The merits of a atunnel system as opposed to a channel train ferry system
Designs for a system of composite shipbuilding, recommended by Lloyds (class 66). By J.H. Cornish Date: 1867
REFUSE TREATMENT PLANTFrench treatment plant for the rational disposal of urban waste : different materials are sorted and disposed of according to their nature Date: 1898
Theobroma cacao, cocoa plantPlate 178 from the John Reeves Collection of Botanical Drawings from Canton, China. Held in the Botany Library at the Natural History Museum, London
Belemnite longitudinal section to show phragmoconeA longitudinal section of a belemnite (Acrocoelites vulgaris) from Toarcian, Alum Shales, Ravenscar, Yks; unreg
Slice of the lunar meteorite Northwest Africa 482A slice of lunar meteorite Northwest Africa 482. This meteorite is very rich in the feldspar mineral anorthite, which give it its pale colour
Section of the plains of Patagonia diagramSection of the plains of Patagonia, on the banks of the S.Cruz cross-section diagram (p.114) from Charles Darwins Geological Observations on South America, 1846
A cross section of the Earth showing the mantle (the thick outer layer), the core (the inner layer) and the inner core (the centre)