142 results filtered with: Pictures
- Pictures
- Online
Bogbean or buckbean plant (Menyanthes trifoliata) with an associated insect and its abdominal segments. Coloured etching, c. 1830.
Date: 1 Feb 1830Reference: 24027i- Pictures
- Online
Prickly poppy (Argemone mexicana): flowering stem with caterpillar and insect. Etching by J. Pass, c. 1798, after J. Ihle.
Ihle, Johann-Eberhard, 1727-1814.Date: 22 January 1798Reference: 25375i- Pictures
- Online
Levant or wild madder plant (Rubia peregrina) with an associated insect and its anatomical segments. Coloured etching, c. 1830.
Date: 1 October 1830Reference: 24164i- Pictures
- Online
Papaw or papaya (Carica papaya): flowering branch, sectioned fruit and insect. Coloured etching by J. Pass, c. 1800, after J. Ihle.
Ihle, Johann-Eberhard, 1727-1814.Date: 18 June 1800Reference: 25396i- Pictures
A hammer killing an insect; advertising Chloro-Kampfer insecticide (Chloro-Camphre, also called Gammol), containing Lindane. Colour lithograph by Seiler, ca. 1950.
Seiler, graphic designer at Aarau, active approximately 1950.Date: [1950?]Reference: 5145i- Pictures
- Online
Cochineal cactus (Nopalea cochenillifera) with insects that feed on it, including the cochineal insect (Dactylopius coccus). Coloured etching by J. Pass, c. 1801, after J. Ihle.
Ihle, Johann-Eberhard, 1727-1814.Date: 27 November 1801Reference: 25390i- Pictures
- Online
Above, an insect, a monkey, a plant (bromelia), a shell and three birds; below, a beetle, a cactus and two plants. Engraving by Heath.
Date: 1806Reference: 40488i- Pictures
- Online
A foxglove (Digitalis purpurea) and orange lily (Lilium bulbiferum): flowering stems with butterfly and other insect. Etching by N. Robert, c. 1660, after himself.
Robert, Nicolas, 1614-1685.Date: [c. 1660]Reference: 24923i- Pictures
- Online
A large insect with a message indicating that AIDS is not transmitted through bug bites; a poster from the America responds to Aids advertising campaign. Colour lithograph.
Date: [between 1990 and 1999]Reference: 667399i- Pictures
Destruction of vermin and insect pests and crop diseases thanks to scientific advice to farmers from the "Land- und Hauswirtschaftlicher Auswertungs- und Informationsdienst". Colour lithograph, ca. 1950.
R., E. von (Graphic designer), active approximately 1950.Date: [1950?]Reference: 573157i- Pictures
- Online
A flowering fuchsia (Fuchsia coccinea) and a planthopper insect (Fulgora diadema) in both pupal and adult state. Coloured etching by J. Pass, c. 1805, after J. Ihle.
Ihle, Johann-Eberhard, 1727-1814.Date: 2 November 1805Reference: 25492i- Pictures
- Online
Above, a bird, a Cretan sheep and two African sheep, an insect and a mollusc; below, three butterflies, a bird of paradise and a titmouse. Engraving by Heath.
Date: 1 September 1806Reference: 40527i- Pictures
- Online
Above, an insect, three gastropod molluscs, a guinea hen and a prickly ophidian; below, an ostracean, a tobacco plant, two insects, two orioles, and an ornithoryncus. Engraving by Heath.
Date: 1 August 1806Reference: 40526i- Pictures
- Online
Ways in which AIDS is not spread from shaking hands and hugging to mosquito and insect bites; an advertisement by the Directorate of Health Services in Manipur. Colour lithograph, ca. 1996.
Date: [1996?]Reference: 677467i- Pictures
- Online
Above, two hogs, an insect, a sea horse, a tanager bird, and a large tapeworm; below, an ibis, a tapir, a teredo (ship-worm), two tortoises and a mollusc. Engraving by Heath.
Reference: 40536i- Pictures
- Online
Above, an insect, a musk rat, a siren (eel-shaped taile amphibian), and two hawk moths; below, a shark, a sponge, a vertebrate, an owl, a noddy (a tropical sea bird) and a stapelia. Engraving by Heath.
Date: 1 September 1806Reference: 40532i- Pictures
- Online
Nine green and red diagrams with Turkish lettering showing how AIDS is not transmitted including top right, an insect [bite] to bottom right a heart [for faithfulness in marriage]; one of a series of six posters from the Stop AIDS campaign. Colour lithograph.
Date: [between 1990 and 1999]Reference: 675015i- Pictures
- Online
Nine green and red diagrams with Spanish lettering showing how AIDS is not transmitted including top right, an insect [bite] to bottom right a heart [for faithfulness in marriage]; one of a series of six posters from the Stop AIDS campaign. Colour lithograph.
Date: [between 1990 and 1999]Reference: 675009i- Pictures
- Online
Nine green and red diagrams with Albanian lettering on how AIDS is not transmitted including top right, an insect [bite] to bottom right a heart [for faithfulness in marriage]; one of a series of six posters from the Stop AIDS campaign. Colour lithograph.
Date: [between 1990 and 1999]Reference: 675007i- Pictures
- Online
Nine green and red diagrams with Portuguese lettering showing how AIDS is not transmitted including top right, an insect [bite] to bottom right a heart [for faithfulness in marriage]; one of a series of six posters from the Stop AIDS campaign. Colour lithograph.
Date: [between 1990 and 1999]Reference: 675010i- Pictures
- Online
Nine green and red diagrams with English lettering showing how AIDS is not transmitted including top right, an insect [bite] to bottom right a heart [for faithfulness in marriage]; one of a series of six posters from the Stop AIDS campaign. Colour lithograph.
Date: [between 1990 and 1999]Reference: 675012i- Pictures
- Online
Nine green and red diagrams with Croatian lettering showing how AIDS is not transmitted including top right, an insect [bite] to bottom right a heart [for faithfulness in marriage]; one of a series of six posters from the Stop AIDS campaign. Colour lithograph.
Date: [between 1990 and 1999]Reference: 675013i- Pictures
- Online
Nine different scarabaeid beetles. Coloured engraving by J. Newton, ca. 1780, after J. Barbut.
Barbut, James, active 1777-1786.Date: 9 Feb 1780Reference: 42701i- Pictures
- Online
Above, a bird, a cricket, an insect, a branch and fruit of the guaiacum tree, an eel and a sea-pie; below, a sprig of a flower, three molluscs, two insects and a piece of a ferric oxide ore. Engraving by Heath.
Reference: 40519i- Pictures
- Online
Five dragonflies and four mayflies. Coloured engraving by J. Newton, ca. 1780, after J. Barbut.
Barbut, James, active 1777-1786.Date: 9 Feb 1780Reference: 42702i