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Chenopodium album, goosefootScanning electron microscope image of a pollen grain from a member of the goosefoot family (x 3000 on a standard 9 cm wide print)
MARAяN, Gregorio (1887-1960). Spanish doctorMARAя N, Gregorio (1887-1960). Spanish doctor and writer. Portrait from 1919
The bullet, with which our martyr President A. Lincoln was assassinated by J.W. Booth, as seen under a microscope. Date c1867. The bullet, with which our martyr President A
German Medical StudentsA group of seated (mostly female) medical students, watching a microscopic projector of what appears to be an insect. Date: 1930s
MICROSCOPEA modern microscope, in common use in school Science classrooms. Date: 1970s
Science LessonChildren having fun with a microscope during a Science lesson at Nuffield Junior School, London. Date: 1960s
Electron MicroscopeThe EM 300 transmission electron microscope, which is used to study tiny voids or dislocations in materials or very small crystallites, A.E.R.E. Harwell. Date: October 1971
Chemical TechnologyA JEM 7A microscope can examine gas or solid interface reactions at temperatures of up to 1200oC, Chemistry Division, Harwell. Date: 1960s
Microcircuit DevelopmentA metallurgist examines a microcircuit on the enlarging screen of a microscope at A.W.R.E. Aldermaston. Date: early 1970s
BLUEBOTTLEThe Bluebottle, or Blow-fly (MUSCA VOMITORIA) as seen through the microscope. Date: 1823
Microscope 1882Diagrams of a microscope and its constituent parts. Date: 1882
Geology in the AntarcticA photograph from Charcots " The Voyage of the Pourquoi Pas" showing a striking example of bare rock in the Graham Land area of the Antarctic
A technician doing miniature workA technician uses an unidentified instrument, incorporating a microscope and an electomagnetic circuit to work on very tiny electronic components. Photograph by Heinz Zinram
Sir Ronald Ross (1857 - 1932), British physician and Nobel Prize winner in 1902, who discovered the scientific link between mosquitoes and human malaria
Science / Robert RobinsonROBERT ROBINSON Scientist; pioneer in the synthetic production of penicillin; winner of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1947 for his work on alkaloids
Criminal Record OfficeExamining fingerprints at the Criminal Record Office looking through a microscope at New Scotland Yard. Metropolitan Police
Scientist Loves CadburysAn archetypal scientist, with a flowing beard and surrounded by apparatus, studies a sample of Cadburys Cocoa; he of course concludes that it is the finest available
Selection of MicroscopesA selection of single microscopes
Descartes / MicroscopeThe rays fallen parallelwise on the concavity of the mirror are brought back obliquely towards the focus of the spherule. Perfected by Siberkhunnas after Descartes
Challenger / Lab WorkWorking in the zoological laboratory on board the research ship Challenger
Buonannis MicroscopeBuonannis horizontal microscope
Ppe Roux / Nos MaitresPIERRE-PAUL-EMILE ROUX French physician and bacteriologist
Metchnikoff / Nos MaitresELIE METCHNIKOFF (ILYA ILICH MECHNIKOV) Russian zoologist and bacteriologist
Hertels MicroscopeHertels microscope
Marshalls MicroscopeJohn Marshalls new invented Double Microscope for viewing the Circulation of the Blood
Campanis MicroscopeCampanis microscope
Bakers Mounted LensBakers mounted lens microscope
Louse Thru Hooke M / ScopeA flea and louse observed with Hookes microscope
Leeuwenhoek at DeskANTON VAN LEEUWENHOEK Dutch naturalist, depicted at his desk
Microscopic ObjectsA variety of living and non- living objects magnified through a microscope
Drop of Pantomime WaterIllustration to one of the Bab Ballads by W. S. Gilbert entitled A Drop of Pantomime Water, showing how the players might look under a microscope
Pasteur in Lab / EdelfeltLOUIS PASTEUR in his laboratory in 1885
Futuristic study of microbesA scientist studies microbes magnified on a screen