EditorialBursatella, Print, Bursatella leachii, common name the ragged sea hare or shaggy sea hare, is a species of large sea slug or sea hare, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Aplysiidae, the sea hares.
EditorialBursatella leachii, Print, Bursatella leachii, common name the ragged sea hare or shaggy sea hare, is a species of large sea slug or sea hare, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Aplysiidae, the sea hares.
EditorialShaggy gastrolobe or crinkle-leaved poison, Gastrolobium villosum. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by G. Barclay after Miss Sarah Drake from John Lindley and Robert Sweet's Ornamental Flower Garden and Shrubbery, G. Willis, London, 1854.
EditorialTree shaggy pea or climbing oxylobium, Oxylobium scandens. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by S. Nevitt after a botanical illustration by Mills from Benjamin Maund and the Rev. John Stevens Henslow's The Botanist, London, 1836.
EditorialShaggy scalycap, Pholiota squarrosa, and golden pholiota, Pholiota aurea. Chromolithograph by Lassus after an illustration by A. Bessin from Leon Rolland's Guide to Mushrooms from France, Switzerland and Belgium, Atlas des Champignons, Paul Klincksieck...
EditorialIllustration on page of manuscript. Goats with long horns and shaggy coats. . Bestiary, with extracts from Giraldus Cambrensis on Irish birds. England, S. (Salisbury?). Bestiary, with extracts from Giraldus Cambrensis on Irish birds. 2nd quarter of th...
EditorialShaggy ink cap, lawyer's wig or shaggy mane, Coprinus comatus. Chromolithograph after a botanical illustration by William Hamilton Gibson from his book Our Edible Toadstools and Mushrooms, Harper, New York, 1895.
EditorialMarble statue of Pan, Imperial, 1st century A.D., Roman, Marble, H. 26 5/8 in. (67.6 cm), Stone Sculpture, Villa gardens and peristyles (courtyards) were filled with images of Dionysos and woodland creatures from his entourage. Pan, the goat god, appea...
EditorialShaggy gastrolobe or crinkle-leaved poison, Gastrolobium villosum. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by G. Barclay after Miss Sarah Drake from John Lindley and Robert Sweet's Ornamental Flower Garden and Shrubbery, G. Willis, London, 1854.
EditorialTree shaggy pea or climbing oxylobium, Oxylobium scandens. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by S. Nevitt after a botanical illustration by Mills from Benjamin Maund and the Rev. John Stevens Henslow's The Botanist, London, 1836.
EditorialShaggy scalycap, Pholiota squarrosa, and golden pholiota, Pholiota aurea. Chromolithograph by Lassus after an illustration by A. Bessin from Leon Rolland's Guide to Mushrooms from France, Switzerland and Belgium, Atlas des Champignons, Paul Klincksieck...
EditorialShaggy hovea, Hovea villosa. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by S. Watts after an illustration by J.T. Hart from Sydenham Edwards' Botanical Register, Ridgeway, London, 1832.
EditorialCrinkle-leaf poison or shaggy gastrolobe, Gastrolobium villosum. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by George Barclay after an illustration by Miss Sarah Drake from Edwards' Botanical Register, edited by John Lindley, London, Ridgeway, 1847.
EditorialShaggy ink cap, lawyer's wig or shaggy mane, Coprinus comatus. Chromolithograph after a botanical illustration by William Hamilton Gibson from his book Our Edible Toadstools and Mushrooms, Harper, New York, 1895.
EditorialMounted British warrior from the pre-Roman era. He wears a brazen helmet, a mantell gedenawg (shaggy cloak), trousers and shoes, and carries a club. In the background is the chapel in the rock, Nottingham. Handcoloured aquatint by R. Havell from an ill...
EditorialShaggy ink cap, Coprinus comatus 21 and common ink cap mushroom, C. atramentarius 22. Chromolithograph after an illustration by M. C. Cooke from his own "British Edible Fungi, how to distinguish and how to cook them," London, Kegan Paul, 1891. Mordecai...
EditorialA priests carries a vase, two priests follow with arms crossed. Two women seem to smooth a shaggy blanket. Frieze of mother-of-pearl, slate and ivory. From the temple of the agricultural god Dagan, Mari. 2.645-2.460 BCE H: 295, cm Inv. S 1269.