703 results filtered with: Digital Images
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Male figure on limestone, Laussel, Upper Palaeolithic period.
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Male figure with ataxic arthropathy of the hips
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Male figure with diseases attached, late 15th century.
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Male and female offering wine and food, wall relief
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
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Male figure holding the skin of his trunk open
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Male figure holding the skin of his trunk open
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Male figure holding the skin of his trunk open
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Male patient whose goitre had been removed three weeks previously
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Anatomical Fugitive sheet. Adam and Eve Type. Male. Shows the layers.
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Male figures with emphasised sexual organs, carved wood. Probably Congo, Africa.
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Male figure in Charles de Bouelles's "In hoc opere... contenta. Liber cordis"
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Male figure with myxedema, after treatment. Caption: 'Myxoedeme franc. Calvitie strumiprive, avant le traitement'
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Anatomical Fugitive sheet. Adam and Eve Type. Male. Shows the layers. With flap raised.
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Wooden Anatomical Figures: Male and female (female 'open' to reveal feotus in womb). anon. n.d.
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Dactylorhiza aff fuchsii Druce ex Soo Orchidaceae Common Spotted orchid. Distribution: Ireland to Mongolia. Roots look like a hand. Coles (1657) calls them Palma Christi sive [or] Satyrion (to distinguish it from Ricinus communis which he calls Palma Christi sive Ricinus. This plant is probably his Female Satyrion and another Dactylorhiza, probably one of the English Marsh orchids, is his Male Satyrion Royal, with purple flowers. In common with Orchis he writes 'The full and plump roots of the Satyrium or Orchis, whereof the Electuary Diasatyrium is made, are of mighty efficacy to provoke to venery, which they that have bulbous roots [meaning the testicle shaped roots of Orchis] do by Signature.'. Terrestrial orchids continue, to be harvested by the millions annually in the Middle East for the production of Salep, including Salep ice cream, because of their mythological aphrodisiacal property. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
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Dactylorhiza foliosa (Rchb.f.)Soo Orchidaceae Distribution: Madeira. Roots look like a hand and Coles (1657) calls them Palma Christi sive [or] Satyrion (to distinguish it from Ricinus communis which he calls Palma Christi sive Ricinus. This plant would be the closest to his Male Satyrion Royal, with purple flowers (but this is likely to be one of the English Marsh orchids,, and Dactylorhiza fuchsii is his Female Satyrion. In common with Orchis he writes 'The full and plump roots of the Satyrium or Orchis, whereof the Electuary Diasatyrium is made, are of mighty efficacy to provoke to venery, which they that have bulbous roots [meaning the testicle shaped roots of Orchis] do by Signature.'. Terrestrial orchids continue to be harvested by the millions annually in the Middle East for the production of Salep, including Salep ice cream, because of their mythological aphrodisiacal property. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
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Human metaphase, normal male + nucleus
Wessex Reg. Genetics Centre- Digital Images
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White male surgeon with scalpel
Hannah Causer, Heart of England NHSFT- Digital Images
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White male surgeon with scalpel
Hannah Causer, Heart of England NHSFT- Digital Images
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Anatomical fugitive sheet, male
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Side view of a Grey male horse
Royal Veterinary College- Digital Images
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Plate XLII. Surgical dissection of the male perineum.
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Normal male 46,XY human karyotype
Wessex Reg. Genetics Centre- Digital Images
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Normal male 46,XY human karyotype
Wessex Reg. Genetics Centre- Digital Images
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White male surgeon holding a heart (animal)
Adrian Wressell, Heart of England NHS FT