1,019 results filtered with: Digital Images, Pictures
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Purple saltires, V-forms and crosses decorated with red blotches. Watercolour by M. Bishop, ca. 1977.
Bishop, Mary, (Mary Cecil Hamilton), 1914-1990.Date: [ca. 1977]Reference: 2856081iPart of: Adamson Collection- Pictures
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Purple crosses, saltires, Y-shapes, V-shapes etc. and red diagonals. Watercolour by M. Bishop, ca. 1977.
Bishop, Mary, (Mary Cecil Hamilton), 1914-1990.Date: [ca. 1977]Reference: 2855736iPart of: Adamson Collection- Pictures
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Purple and green mountains against a grey sky with the sun and moon. Watercolour by M. Bishop, 1966.
Bishop, Mary, (Mary Cecil Hamilton), 1914-1990.Date: Dec 66 [December 1966]Reference: 2889793iPart of: Adamson Collection- Pictures
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Purple and red crosses, saltires and V-forms criss-crossed diagonally in red. Watercolour by M. Bishop, ca. 1977.
Bishop, Mary, (Mary Cecil Hamilton), 1914-1990.Date: [ca. 1977]Reference: 2856079iPart of: Adamson Collection- Pictures
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Purple parallel dashes meeting in a V-shape: two eye-shapes form the junction. Watercolour by M. Bishop, 1968.
Bishop, Mary, (Mary Cecil Hamilton), 1914-1990.Date: Feb. 68 [February 1968]Reference: 2858697iPart of: Adamson Collection- Pictures
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Purple waves, in which seven people are drowning and one is holding an oar. Watercolour by M. Bishop, 1970.
Bishop, Mary, (Mary Cecil Hamilton), 1914-1990.Date: June 1970Reference: 2868058iPart of: Adamson Collection- Pictures
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Purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria L.): flowering stem with separate flowers and calyx. Coloured etching by M. Bouchard, 177-.
Reference: 17304i- Pictures
Purple discolouration in chest of twenty two year old woman with purpura and ileus. Watercolour by Barbara E. Nicholson, 1949.
Nicholson, BarbaraDate: 1949Reference: 33104iPart of: Barbara Nicholson medical illustration collection.- Digital Images
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Purple bacteria or purple photosynthetic bacteria are pigmented by bacteriochlorophyll and carotenoids, giving them a colourful range of purples, pinks and oranges. They photosynthesize without producing oxygen as a by-product. This type of bacteria are proteobacteria which are phototrophic (produce their own food via photosynthesis)
Odra Noel- Digital Images
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Purple bacteria or purple photosynthetic bacteria are pigmented by bacteriochlorophyll and carotenoids, giving them a colourful range of purples, pinks and oranges. They photosynthesize without producing oxygen as a by-product. This type of bacteria are proteobacteria which are phototrophic (produce their own food via photosynthesis)
Odra Noel- Digital Images
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Iris versicolor (Purple flag)
Rowan McOnegal- Digital Images
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Salvia Officinalis (Sage, Purple)
Rowan McOnegal- Digital Images
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Lythrum salicaria (Purple loosestrife)
Rowan McOnegal- Digital Images
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Digitalis purpurea (Purple foxglove)
Sue Snell- Digital Images
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Digitalis purpurea (Purple foxglove)
Rowan McOnegal- Digital Images
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Digitalis purpurea (Purple foxglove)
Sue Snell- Digital Images
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Digitalis purpurea (Purple foxglove)
Sue Snell- Digital Images
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C18 Chinese woodcut: Purple deficiency throat
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Chinese C18: Paediatric pox - 'Purple and black indentations'
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Solanum atropurpureum Schrank Solanaceae. Purple Devil. Purple-spined Nightshade. Herbaceous perennial. Distribution: Brazil. This ferociously spined plant contains tropane alkaloids, atropine, hyoscyamine and scopolamine. All are anticholinergic and block the acetylcholine mediated actions of the parasympathetic nervous system. While the alkaloids are used in medicine and as an antidote to anticholinergic nerve gas poisons, the plant itself is not used in medicine. Its sharp spines can be irritant. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
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Prostanthera ovalifolia R.Br. Lamiaceae Alpine anise bush, Oval leaf Mintbush, Purple mintbush. Woody shrub. Distribution: Australia. Minty flavoured leaves used in jams and jellies. Various essential oils are produced from commercially grown P. ovalifolia (cis-dihydroagarofuran, kessane, 1,8-cineole which is also known as eucalyptol, p-cymene,) and P. cuneata also contains eucalyptol. Concentrations of essential oils in the plants vary according to the clonal variety, growing conditions and time of year. Aboriginal peoples used Prostanthera leaves in medicinal ointments and washes, but one species, P. striatiflora, was used to poison waterholes to kill visiting emu (Hegarty, 2001). Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Pictures
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Red and purple excrescences with purple horizontals and a whorl. Watercolour by M. Bishop, 1967.
Bishop, Mary, (Mary Cecil Hamilton), 1914-1990.Date: Sept. 67 [September 1967]Reference: 2864392iPart of: Adamson Collection- Pictures
- Online
Red saltires, purple whorls, and a purple head in profile. Watercolour by M. Bishop, 1977.
Bishop, Mary, (Mary Cecil Hamilton), 1914-1990.Date: May 77 [May 1977]Reference: 2855728iPart of: Adamson Collection- Pictures
- Online
A purple face in anguish, with long purple hair (Christ?). Watercolour by M. Bishop, 1967.
Bishop, Mary, (Mary Cecil Hamilton), 1914-1990.Date: Aug. 67 [August 1967]Reference: 2854520iPart of: Adamson Collection- Pictures
- Online
A purple and green head in a purple aureole or cage. Watercolour by M. Bishop, 1967.
Bishop, Mary, (Mary Cecil Hamilton), 1914-1990.Date: Aug. 67 [August 1967]Reference: 2854529iPart of: Adamson Collection