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1,031 results
  • Two figures with abnormalities, one with wings as arms and feathered legs and the other one with a horned head
  • Two human figures showing abnormalities, one with a face on the torso and the other with the body of a child on the torso
  • Three episodes about horticultural abnormalities and one episode about a young doctor on a visit. Letterpress and wood engraving after G. Du Maurier, 1865.
  • Three figures with abnormalities, One figure has a human body with a ducks head, the second figure has a Lions body with a human head and the third has a human body with webbed feet and hands
  • An abnormally tall and an abnormally small man: the former about to light the latter's cigarette. Photograph, 1927.
  • Abnormal foetal cells in amniotic fluid
  • A cow's teat orifice showing abnormality
  • A cow's teat orifice showing abnormality
  • A cow's teat orifice showing abnormality
  • A cow's teat orifice showing abnormality
  • A cow's teat orifice showing abnormality
  • A cow's teat orifice showing abnormality
  • Abnormal keratocyte in the corneal stroma
  • Chinese woodcut, 'abnormal' creatures are not comestible
  • X-ray: abnormal small facet, dog's hip joint
  • X-ray: abnormal small facet, dog's hip joint
  • Child with an abnormal growth of the skull with proptosis
  • Four diagrams of the abnormal female uterus. Engraving by Milton, 1804.
  • An abnormal foetus in the womb, which is about to be naturally aborted. Engraving.
  • A sacred Chinese figure, bald, with abnormally high forehead. Painting by a Chinese painter.
  • A hare with abnormal teeth in a forest clearing. Etching by J.E. Ridinger.
  • Two human heads with abnormality, one frontal view with no nose and one profile with large nose
  • A horse with an abnormally coloured coat standing in a paddock with other horses in the background. Etching by J. E. Ridinger after D. Sauerkern.
  • Abnormal heads and skulls, fractured and bandaged clavicle and a broken (?) leg bandaged in a splint. Engraving by W. Lowry, 1811, after J. Farey, the younger.
  • Abnormal heads and skulls, fractured and bandaged clavicle and a broken (?) leg bandaged in a splint. Engraving by W. Lowry, 1811, after J. Farey, the younger.
  • The tax on medicine represented as a tax on illness and, ultimately, even on the 'abnormality' of healthiness: ten vignettes. Photomechanical reproduction of a wood engraving by H. Maigrot, 1907.
  • Baby with arthrogryposis. This is caused by a muscle disorder that leads to the joints being limited in their range of movement and the limbs being pulled into abnormal positions.
  • Hyperkeratosis of the heel. Hyperkeratosis describes a thickening of the outer layer of the skin caused by abnormally increased amounts of the protein keratin which normally functions to protect the skin.
  • Anne-Marie Hérig, a girl with a skin abnormality; the conjoined twins Judith and Hélène; below, an infant with one central eye. Coloured etching by N.E. Lerouge after J. de Sève.
  • Short-title catalogue : of works on psychical research, spiritualism, magic, psychology, legerdemain and other methods of deception, charlatanism, witchcraft, and technical works for the scientific investigation of alleged abnormal phenomena, from circa 1450 A.D. to 1929 A.D / Compiled by Harry Price.