Disease Gallery
Available as Prints and Gift Items
Choose from 943 pictures in our Disease collection for your Wall Art or Photo Gift. All professionally made for Quick Shipping.

Shotley Bridge General Hospital, County Durham
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Captain Francis Crozier of HMS Terror, 1845
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T lymphocytes and cancer cell, SEM C001/1679
Science Photo Library
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Soviet cholera vaccination poster, 1967
Science Photo Library
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Captain Francis Crozier of HMS Terror, 1845
Engraving of Captain Francis Crozier (1796-1848) of HMS Terror, pictured shortly before departing on the ill-fated Franklin Arctic expedition of 1845. In 1845 the British Admiralty sent two polar exploration ships, HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, to look for the Northwest passage round the northern coast of Canada. The expedition, commanded by Sir John Franklin, disappeared from view late in 1845 and none of the men were ever seen again. In fact the ships made it to the King William Island region, then got stuck in the ice. With supplies running out the surviving crew abandoned ship and headed south. However, none made it to safety and it is assumed all died from disease, exposure or starvation. From 1848 onwards a number of relief expeditions were sent to find Franklin, but it was only in 1859 that Francis Leopold McClintock was able to confirm Franklin's fate
© Mary Evans Picture Library 2015 - https://copyrighthub.org/s0/hub1/creation/maryevans/MaryEvansPictureID/10217699

Medical ilustration of an appendix with appendicitis
Stocktrek Images
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Smallpox and Vaccination Hospital, Highgate, London
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South Eastern Fever Hospital, New Cross, London
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The End of Sir John Franklins Arctic Expedition, 1845
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Worshipping the God of Smallpox, India
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The End of Sir John Franklins Arctic Expedition, 1845
Engraving showing the end of Sir John Franklin's ill-fated Arctic expedition of 1845, entitled They Forged the last link with their lives'. This engraving was taken from a painting by W. Thomas Smith, exhibited in the Royal Academy in 1896. In 1845 the British Admiralty sent two polar exploration ships, HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, to look for the Northwest passage round the northern coast of Canada. The expedition, commanded by Sir John Franklin, disappeared from view late in 1845 and none of the men were ever seen again. In fact the ships made it to the King William Island region, then got stuck in the ice. With supplies running out the surviving crew abandoned ship and headed south. However, none made it to safety and it is all died from disease, exposure or starvation. This image shows the end of that desperate attempt to reach safety. From 1848 onwards a number of relief expeditions were sent to find Franklin, but it was only in 1859 that Francis Leopold McClintock was finally able to confirm Franklin's fate
© Mary Evans Picture Library 2015 - https://copyrighthub.org/s0/hub1/creation/maryevans/MaryEvansPictureID/10217709

The Enterprise and Investigator surrounded by ice, Barro
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Langho Colony, Ribblesdale, Lancashire
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Cartoon, Triumph of De-Jenner-Action 1898
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Mosquito (Culicidae), female, internal anatomy, and sucking blood from skin, cross-section
Fine Art Storehouse
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The Enterprise and Investigator surrounded by ice, Barro
Engraving showing the Enterprise and Investigator surrounded by pack ice in Barrow's Straits, September 1849. These two ships were used by Sir James Clark Ross's Expedition of 1848-1849 to search the Arctic for signs of Sir John Franklin's ill-fated Arctic expedition of 1845. In 1845 the British Admiralty sent two polar exploration ships, HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, to look for the Northwest passage round the northern coast of Canada. The expedition, commanded by Sir John Franklin, disappeared from view late in 1845 and none of the men were ever seen again. In fact the ships made it to the King William Island region, then got stuck in the ice. With supplies running out the surviving crew abandoned ship and headed south. However, none made it to safety and it is assumed all died from disease, exposure or starvation. From 1848 onwards a number of relief expeditions were sent to find Franklin, but it was only in 1859 that Francis Leopold McClintock was able to confirm Franklin's fate
© Mary Evans Picture Library 2015 - https://copyrighthub.org/s0/hub1/creation/maryevans/MaryEvansPictureID/10217737

Dark Field Light Micrograph: Scabies Mite
Ardea Wildlife Pets Environment
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Lord Have Mercy Upon Us': The Plague in London (woodcut) (b/w photo)
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Liver tissue cirrhosis, light micrograph
Science Photo Library
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