Scienti Gallery
wyydma
summer sound
beach pop
dyyune
michał zakrzewski
ringoroadagain:xtec:I’M OUT love the implication here that just by saying a scientific formula you c
Nouveau recueil de planches coloriées d'oiseaux - Buffon - vol. 3, 1838 - via Internet Archive
Margot Robbie at the Academy Of Motion Picture Arts And Sciences’ Scientific And Technical Awa
Die vergleichende Osteologie - 1821
themineralandgemnephilim:Rubellite Tourmaline clusterBurma (Myanmar)Scientific Facts,Refractive Inde
sci-universe:Galileo’s sketches from Sidereus Nuncius (1610), the first published scientific work ba
Icones plantarum cryptogamicarum - Carl Friedrich Philipp Martius - c.1828-1834 - via e-rara
thejunglenook:abhiouslyabhi:Neil deGrasse Tyson everyoneSaving this for future scientific takedowns
oldfilmsflicker:Scientific proof that Denzel Washington is the most attractive man ever
leisure-activity:The Vampire Squid..Vampyroteuthis infernalis, its scientific name, translates to “v
sagansense:Sir David Attenborough Reveals He’s Had A Pacemaker FittedThe 87-year-old filmmaker admit
neurosciencestuff:Scientists develop scientific technique to help prevent inherited disorders in hum
domhnal-gleeson:scientific concepts in cinema: Hawking radiation— in The Theory of Everything (2014)
whispersandwhiskerburn:aprofoundbondwithdean:he really isThis scientific study has concluded that De
2020 was a busy art year for me, that’s for sure! Here’s a look at some of what I did as
An illustration of dill (a dillustration?), inspired by old botanical prints. This was for a private
we-are-star-stuff:1,000 Years of Scientific Texts From The Islamic World Are Now OnlineBetween the 9
Selections from Bairei hyakuchō gafu by Bairei Kōno, 1881.
Red-tailed hawk. From John James Audubon’s Birds of America, circa 1827-1830.
Snow finch. From The birds of Europe by John Gould, 1837. Plates drawn from life and on stone by J.
Cedar bird. From John James Audubon’s Birds of America, circa 1827-1830.
Black and white kingfisher. From The birds of Europe v.02, 1837. By John Gould, Plates drawn from li
Selections from Studer’s popular ornithology v.01, 1878.
Double-crested cormorant. From John James Audubon’s Birds of America, 1835.
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