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Home > Science Photo Library > Images Dated > 2005 > June > 29 Jun 2005

Images Dated 29th June 2005

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Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Side view of the healthy hand of a woman

Side view of the healthy hand of a woman
Healthy hand. Side view of the hand of a woman, with fingers spread out

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Hoover Factory

Hoover Factory, Greenford, London, UK. This building was designed by the British architect firm Wallis, Gilbert and Partners and built between 1931 and 1938

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: One America Square

One America Square, Tower Hill, London, UK. This building was designed by the architects Renton Howard Wood Levin (RHWL). Photographed in 1999

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Boring a hole

Boring a hole. Historical artwork of workers using a steam-powered boring device to dig a deep hole. One worker is turning the shaft between each stroke so that the cutting device hits all parts of

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: XMM-Newton telescope

XMM-Newton telescope. Artwork of the XMM (X-ray Multi-Mirror)-Newton X-ray telescope in orbit above the Earth. This European Space Agency (ESA)

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Holing at a coalface

Holing at a coalface. Historical artwork of a miner engaging in the technique known as holing. This was a method used for extracting coal

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Early petrol locomotives

Early petrol locomotives
Early petrol engine. Historical artwork of early designs for an electrical generator (top left) and locomotives, using petrol as their fuel source

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Architectural detail

Architectural detail. Photographed in Newcastle, UK in August 2002

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Imperial War Museum North

Imperial War Museum North, Trafford, Manchester, UK. The museum was designed by Polish-born Daniel Libeskind who based the structure on the globe, broken into three pieces, or shards

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Early petrol motors

Early petrol motors, historical artwork. The first commercially successful petrol-driven motors were built in the second half of the 19th century by the Belgian Etienne Lenoir

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Trigers caisson, 19th century

Trigers caisson, 19th century
Trigers caisson. 19th-century artwork of workers using the pneumatic caisson invented in 1839 by the French engineer Triger

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Miners at Chihuahua, Mexico

Miners at Chihuahua, Mexico. Historical artwork of workers in a 19th century Mexican mine. Chihuahua is a state in northern Mexico

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Miners in a timbered tunnel

Miners in a timbered tunnel. Historical artwork of workers in a 19th century mine, loading debris and rocks onto a wagon. Timber was used in mines to support the roof

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Architectural detail and lampost

Architectural detail and lampost, London, UK. Photographed in January 2002

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Hoover Factory

Hoover Factory, Greenford, London, UK. This building was designed by the British architect firm Wallis, Gilbert and Partners and built between 1931 and 1938

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Hoover Factory

Hoover Factory, Greenford, London, UK. This building was designed by the British architect firm Wallis, Gilbert and Partners and built between 1931 and 1938

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Bankside Power Station

Bankside Power Station, London, UK. This building was designed by the British architect Sir Giles Gilbert Scott and built in two stages between 1947 and 1963

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Artwork of Daedalus starship

Artwork of Daedalus starship
Starship Daedalus. Artists impression of Daedalus, a space vehicle designed in 1978 by the British Interplanetary Society to visit Barnards Star

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Portrait of German chemist Daniel Sennert

Portrait of German chemist Daniel Sennert
Portrait of Daniel Sennert (1572-1637) at the age of 55 from an engraving by M. Merian (1627). Sennert was Professor of Medicine at Wittenberg from 1602

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Descartes giant microscope, 1637

Descartes giant microscope, 1637
A drawing of the giant microscope from Rene Descartes Dioptrique, 1637. Li is a condensing lens, the specimen is placed at z. It is unlikely that this microscope was ever constructed

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Jean Dumas, French chemist

Jean Dumas, French chemist
Jean Dumas (1800-1884), French chemist. Dumas studied chemistry in Geneva and Paris, becoming professor of chemistry at the Athanaeum

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Hernando Cortez, Spanish explorer

Hernando Cortez, Spanish explorer
Hernando Cortez (1485-1547), the conqueror of the Aztec empire in Mexico. After fighting in the conquest of Cuba, Cortez was given command of an expedition to Mexico

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Uluru (Ayers Rock)

Uluru (Ayers Rock) in the Northern Territory, Australia. Uluru is an inselberg, a steep-sided hill of solid rock that rises out of a plain because of the erosion of the material around it

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Plant diseases, historical artwork

Plant diseases, historical artwork

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Soap films on a cube

Soap films on a cube
Soap film on a cube frame. Soap bubbles form sheets of minimum surface area when stretched between two points. Therefore, when stretched between straight metal wires they will form flat planes

Background imageImages Dated 29th June 2005: Soap films on a pyramid

Soap films on a pyramid
Soap film on a pyramid frame. Soap bubbles form sheets of minimum surface area when stretched between two points. Therefore, when stretched between straight metal wires they will form flat planes


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