- How the wearing of a hat shows character
- The Tasmanian 'Mountain Shrimp'
- Five Girls
- white potato
- The parable of the net
- Miners ascending, Central shaft, Hoosac Tunnel
- Three children sitting in the grass
- Golfer
- ABC of the gospel
ABC of the gospel - Palm Sunday
- Kim disguising the native spy
- Common Crayfish
Common Crayfish - Two young girls
- If you split open a maple key, you will find hidden within one of its halves the beautiful baby tree
- hemlock cone
- The Unjust Judge
- Mary washing the feet of Jesus
- Hero's Engines
One of the early influences of the art of printing was to bring to the notice of some restless minds the writings of Hero and Archimedes. In Hero's Pneumatics, published more than 120 years before Christ, he gives such a clear account of an invention of his own, in which the expansive force of steam was used to give and maintain motion, as to establish thoroughly his right to the basic invention of the steam engine. He described three apparatus that he devised. In one, the currents of air and aqueous vapor rising through a tube from a hollow sphere, containing water, under which a fire is burning, support a ball placed immediately above the tube, and make it seem to dance. In another apparatus, a hollow sphere into which steam has arisen from what we now call a boiler, is supported on a horizontal or vertical axis, and provided with tubes that protrude from the sphere, and are bent at right angles to the radius and also to the pivot. The inner ends of these tubes lie within the sphere, so that the steam passes from the sphere through the tubes. As soon as this happens, the sphere takes up a rapid rotation, that continue so long as the steam continues to escape from the nozzles of the tubes, which point rearwardly. A third apparatus was merely an elaboration of the second, in that the sphere was connected with an altar which supported a large drum on which were figures representing human beings. The fire being lighted, the sphere would soon begin to revolve, and with it the drum; and the figures on it would seem to dance around, above the altar. The invention was probably to impress the people with the idea that the priests were exerting supernatural power. - Barnacles
Barnacles They are attached to a flexible muscular stem and have a flat, three-sided shell. A large number of genera are distinguished according to the number and the greater or lesser development of the limestone plates. Among the most common are Lepas and Otion . About half of all Lepadid species attach themselves to objects moving in water, to the keel of ships, to pieces of wreckage, etc., or to animals that often change places. Anelasma squalicolaeg lives parasitically on Northern Sharks, into whose skin it has penetrated with its stem; With Lepas anserifera and a few other species, the ships are not infrequently overgrown on their return from almost all southern and tropical seas. [As translated online ] - the fruit cluster of the aster
- Golfer
- Peter's wife's mother
- The Unjust steward
- Poppyheads
Poppyheads - Ignatius devoured by wild beasts
- Antipas burned in a red-hot brazen ox
- Putting a wreath on a animal
- The Withered hand
- The parable of the leaven
- The treasure hid in a field
- Artificial Breathing - Schäfer System
- Apprehension of Andries Langedul
- Young girl with a fan
- Mother with two girls
- Oil lamp
- Four children dancing at the seashore
- seed case of the tick trefoil
- Golfer
- Golfer
- Cereals
Cereals - Chiasognathus Grantii
2 Chiasognathus Grantii, under side 3,4 Maxillae with lacinia and palpus 5 Mentumprocesses of labium and palpi, under view 6 Base of anterior femora 7 Mentum, labium, &c. upper view 8 Labium with processes amd palpi, lateral view - The merchant seeking goodly pearls
- L’Ancien Louvre, d’après une peinture de Zeeman
- Camp Kitchen
- Im gonna cry
- Six girls walking
- Girl with baby in a cradle in a tree
- Acadian Flycatchers
- Fruits
Fruits - Four ladies with flowers in their hair
- St. Catherine on her Knees
- One can gain nothing from this stance
- Shadow-portrait on Glass
- Stage Getting ready to leave
- Mr Liston in his own character
- Six Girls
- young corn plant
- Golfer
- Christ walking on the water
- The Boy Scout in Action