EditorialNaples painter, painter of the Louvre Centauromachie, colonette crater (Orpheus and the Thracians, Manteljuveniles), clay, quickly turned, painted, alternately fired, Total: Height: 48 cm, ceramics, history of Orpheus, High Classical (Greek antiquity),...
EditorialApollo's chariot on an Attic crater (6th BCE). Lightly micaceous pink clay, yellowish veneer, dark brown silhouettes, light brown and reddish violet for part of the interior of the figures. Origin unknown. Height 98 cm-Inv. 911.
EditorialEmpedocles, standing frontally with his head turned in three-quarter view, directs his gaze toward a flame (the crater of Mount Aetna?) emerging from a horizontal ground line, a walking stick leans toward the right margin.
EditorialThe crater of Mount Erebus. The Antarctic book. Winter quarters, 1907-1909. [Edited by E. H. Shackleton. With plates by George Marston.]. London : William Heinemann, 1909. Source: C.118.g.6 opposte page 22.
EditorialULA's Atlas V launches NASA's LRO and LCROSS satellites from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, Kennedy Space Center - 18 Jun 2009
EditorialULA and NASA's Atlas V and LRO and LCROSS satellites prepare for launch from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, Kennedy Space Center, United States - 18 Jun 2009
EditorialOrnamental Crater., Jackson, William Henry (1843-1942), E. & H.T. Anthony (Firm), Geographical Surveys West of the 100th Meridian (U.S.), 1870, United States.
EditorialCrater of Castle Geyser, Fire Hole Basin., Jackson, William Henry (1843-1942), Geographical Surveys West of the 100th Meridian (U.S.), 1871, United States.