mail_outline sales@mediastorehouse.com
Figure 49: Painful weeping and forward looking. 1854-56, printed 1862
Figure 18: Aggression, wickedness, 1854-56, printed 1862
Figure 17: On the right, electrization of m. procerus: severity, aggression. On the left: attention. 1854-56, printed 1862
Figure 60: Fright, 1854-56, printed 1862. Creators: Duchenne de BoulogneFigure 60: Fright, 1854-56, printed 1862
Figure 70: Head of the Laocoon of Rome, 1854-56, printed 1862. Creators: Duchenne de Boulogne, Adrien Alban TournachonFigure 70: Head of the Laocoon of Rome, 1854-56, printed 1862
Figure 45: Pain and despair. 1854-56, printed 1862. Creators: Duchenne de BoulogneFigure 45: Pain and despair. 1854-56, printed 1862
Figure 6: The grimace produced is similar to a tic of the face, 1854-56, printed 1862
Figure 75: Nun saying her prayers, 1854-56, printed 1862
Figure 62: Terror, semiprofile, 1854-56, printed 1862. Creators: Duchenne de BoulogneFigure 62: Terror, semiprofile, 1854-56, printed 1862
Figure 78: Scene of coquetry, 1854-56, printed 1862. Creators: Duchenne de BoulogneFigure 78: Scene of coquetry, 1854-56, printed 1862
Figure 16: Expression of severity, 1854-56, printed 1862
Figure 50: Affected weeping and face in repose, 1854-56, printed 1862
Figure 36: Scornful laughter and scornful disgust, 1854-56, printed 1862
Figure 20: Profound suffering, with resignation, 1854-56, printed 1862
Electro-Physiologie, Figure 64, 1854-56, printed 1862. Creator: Adrien Alban TournachonElectro-Physiologie, Figure 64, 1854-56, printed 1862
People watching an early television broadcast, c1930, (1933). Creator: UnknownPeople watching an early television broadcast, c1930, (1933). Television! By the genius of James L. Baird, sight as well as sound was successfully broadcast in 1930. One of the pioneer experiments
Will he make gold?, 1932. Creator: UnknownWill he make gold?, 1932. Fabriquera-t-il de l or?. Engineer Zbigniew Dunikowski claimed to be in possession of a secret formula which allowed him to obtain gold from ordinary sand and rocks
The Alchemist, 16th century, (1849). Creator: Bisson & CottardThe Alchemist, 16th century, (1849). An alchemist in his laboratory. Engraving after a drawing by Ferdinand Sere, after the 16th century original by Hans Vredeman de Vries in the Bibliotheque
Experiments in Science, 1897. Creator: John LeechExperiments in Science, 1897. A man in 17th-century dress running away from an explosion. From " The Comic History of England" by Gilbert Abbott A Beckett
Sample scoop and arm, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. Creator: NASASample scoop and arm, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. The Viking 1 spacecraft, part of NASAs Viking programme, was the first spacecraft to land successfully on Mars and perform its mission
Buzz Aldrin sets up the seismic experiment, Apollo II mission, July 1969. Creator: Neil ArmstrongBuzz Aldrin sets up the seismic experiment, Apollo II mission, July 1969. Astronaut Buzz Aldrin on the lunar surface. The Apollo 11 Lunar Module, code named Eagle
Trench excavated by surface sampler, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. Creator: NASATrench excavated by surface sampler, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. The Viking 1 spacecraft, part of NASAs Viking programme
Giving Prisoners the Smallpox in Gaol, late 18th century, (c1934)Giving Prisoners the Smallpox in Gaol, 18th century, (c1934). Illustration showing prisoners in Newgate Gaol being inoculated
Domestic chemistry class, Battersea Polytechnic, London, 1907. Female students at work in a laboratory
Science class, Aristotle Road Girls School, Clapham, London, 1908Science room, Aristotle Road Girls School, Clapham, London, 1908. A class of girls conduct experiments using a variety of laboratory equipment in a classroom
Chemistry lesson, Albion Street Girls School, Rotherhithe, London, 1908. Three pupils assist their teacher with an experiment concerning the properties of air, watched by the rest of the class
Science class, Albion Street Girls School, Rotherhithe, London, 1908. Students watch an experiment being performed at the front of the class, supervised by the teacher
Berthold Schwarz (im 14. Jahrh), 1934. Berthold Schwarz, 1380. Semi- legendary German Franciscan monk of Freiburg, whose real name was Konstantin Anklitzen
Galvanis discovery, 1780 (1894). Italian physiologist Luigi Galvani experimenting on frogs. A professor working in Bologna
They were seen to fall evenly, c1918. In 1589 the Italian scientist Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) dropped two balls of different masses from the Leaning Tower of Pisa to demonstrate that their time of
Twelfth Key of Basil Valentine, 1651, illustrating that the Philosophers Stone must be combined with gold to produce new gold, just as a lion eats a serpent to change it into its own substance
Michael Faraday, British chemist and physicist, c1845. Artist: J CookMichael Faraday, British chemist and physicist, c1845. Faraday (1791-1867) was one of the greatest scientists of the 19th century
The discovery of the Leyden Jar, 1745 (1894). An experiment conducted by Dutch scientist Pieter van Musschenbroek. Musschenbroeck (1692-1761) and his student, Andrea Cunaeus
Pieter van Musschenbroek and Andreas Cunaeus, Dutch scientists, c1870. Artist: CL van KesterenPieter van Musschenbroek and Andreas Cunaeus, Dutch scientists, c1870. In 1745, Musschenbroek and his student, Cunaeus, invented a cheap and convenient device for storing an electric charge
Experiments with Captain Fowkes pontoon bridge on the Serpentine, Hyde Park, London, 1860. Francis Fowke (1823-1865) was a British architect
The Most Mysterious Substance in Nature - Radium, 1903. Artist: Alfred Hugh FisherThe Most Mysterious Substance in Nature - Radium, 1903. Experiments made in Paris by the discoverers, Pierre and Marie Curie
Experimental Gunnery, 19th century. Artist: William GreatbachExperimental Gunnery, 19th century
Louis Pasteur, 19th century French microbiologist and chemist, (1900). Pasteur (1822-1895) developed the pasteurisation process which kills pathogens in milk, wine and foods
Foucaults pendulum in the Pantheon, Paris, (1851), 1900Foucaults pendulum in the Pantheon, Paris, 1851 (1900). Foucaults pendulum, named after the French physicist Leon Foucault, was conceived as an experiment to demonstrate the rotation of the Earth
Electrical Experiment, 1777. Artist: Amedee van LooElectrical Experiment, 1777. Found in the collection of the State Museum Arkhangelskoye Estate, Moscow
Pneumatic Experiment, 1777. Artist: Amedee van LooPneumatic Experiment, 1777. Found in the collection of the State Museum Arkhangelskoye Estate, Moscow
The electric furnace, 1890-1910. French advertising for Liebig Extract of Meat
The examination of a childs arm by radiography, 19th century. Artist: Gustave Francois LasellazThe examination of a childs arm by radiography, 19th century. A print from les Dernieres Merveilles de la Science, by Daniel Bellet
Antoine Lavoisiers apparatus for weighing gases, 1789. The discoverer of oxygen, French chemist Antoine Laurent Lavoisier (1743-1794) is regarded as the founder of the modern science of chemistry
Antoine Lavoisiers apparatus for synthesizing water from hydrogen (left) and oxygen (right), 1881. The discoverer of oxygen
Lazaro Spallanzani, 18th century Italian naturalist and biologist, 1874Lazzaro Spallanzani, 18th century Italian naturalist and biologist, 1874. Spallanzani (1729-1799) investigating the digestive system of the chicken
Lavoisiers investigation of the existence of oxygen in the air, late 18th century, (1894). French chemist Antoine Lavoisiers (1743-1794) experiment to demonstrate the existence of oxygen
Watts First Experiment, 18th century, (c1870). Artist: Herbert BourneWatts First Experiment, 18th century, (c1870). James Watt (1736-1819) Scottish engineer, as a boy experimenting with the tea-kettle at the dining table of his childhood home at Greenock