351 results filtered with: Red
- Digital Images
- Online
Human heart (mitral valve) tissue displaying calcification
Sergio Bertazzo, Department of Materials, Imperial College London- Digital Images
- Online
Menstrual blood, artwork title "Untitled #47"
Beauty in Blood- Digital Images
- Online
Arabidopsis thaliana plant cells containing chloroplasts, LM
Fernán Federici- Digital Images
- Online
Laboratory latex glove, LM
Olivia Engmann- Digital Images
- Online
Menstrual blood, artwork title "Falling 2"
Beauty in Blood- Digital Images
- Online
Menstrual blood, artwork title "Red Rising"
Beauty in Blood- Digital Images
- Online
Illustration of the DNA double helix. The sugar-phosphate backbone of the two complementary strands are visible (red and blue).
Susan Lockhart- Digital Images
- Online
Neurone development, embryoid body
John Grady, Doug Turnbull, Claudia Racca, Newcastle University- Digital Images
- Online
Menstrual blood, artwork title "Small Red Mountain"
Beauty in Blood- Digital Images
- Online
Dividing HeLa cell, LM
Kevin Mackenzie, University of Aberdeen- Digital Images
- Online
Grass seed covered in bacteria from infected dog's paw
Anne Weston, Francis Crick Institute- Digital Images
- Online
Rose (Rosa sp.)
Lauren Holden- Digital Images
- Online
Young girl with Down's syndrome
Fiona Yaron-Field- Digital Images
- Online
Stem cell transfer of mitochondria
Queen's University Belfast- Digital Images
- Online
Mouse nose, transverse section
David Linstead- Digital Images
- Online
Gastrointestinal tract, equine
Michael Frank, Royal Veterinary College- Digital Images
- Online
Cells infected with candida yeast, LM
Kevin Mackenzie, University of Aberdeen- Digital Images
- Online
Zinnia cultivar
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Caricatural illustration of ophidiophobia (fear of snakes)
Madeleine Kuijper illustraties- Digital Images
- Online
Varicose Veins, Legs. Female. Illustrated with thermography
Thermal Vision Research, Wellcome Collection- Digital Images
- Online
3D reconstruction of chinchilla, composite
Scott Birch- Digital Images
- Online
Lobelia tupa L Campanulaceae Tabaco del Diablo [Devil's tobacco]. Distribution: Central Chile. Dried leaves are smoked as a hallucinogen by the Mapuchu Indians of Chile. It was also used as a respiratory stimulant. The genus was named after Matthias de L’Obel or Lobel, (1538–1616), Flemish botanist and physician to James I of England, author of the great herbal Plantarum seu Stirpium Historia (1576). Lobeline, a chemical from the plant has nicotine like actions and for a while lobeline was used to help people withdraw from smoking, but was found to be ineffective. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Menstrual blood, artwork title "Bursting Through"
Beauty in Blood- Digital Images
- Online
Illustration depicting semi-conservative DNA replication. A DNA double helix prior to replication is shown in the top left of the image. The sugar phosphate backbone and nucleotide bases are visible. Complementary base pairing of adenine with thymine (blue with green) and guanine with cytosine (red with yellow) is shown. During replication, a length of the double helix temporarily unwinds and separates into two strands. Free nucleotides bind by complementary base pairing to the recently exposed nucleotides on each strand which act as a template. Two new double helices are formed, each containing one original generation and one new generation strand of DNA. The sequence of base pairs in each double helix is identical to the original.
Susan Lockhart- Digital Images
- Online
Potato starch grains (Solanum tuberosum)
Lauren Holden