EditorialLance beard-heath or lanceolate leucopogon, Leucopogon lanceolatus, native to Australia. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Swan after an illustration by William Jackson Hooker from Samuel Curtis' "Botanical Magazine," London, 1832.
EditorialSpear thistle, Cirsium vulgare (Carduus lanceolatus). Handcoloured copperplate engraving after an illustration by James Sowerby from James Smith's English Botany, London, 1793.
EditorialLance beard-heath or lanceolate leucopogon, Leucopogon lanceolatus, native to Australia. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Swan after an illustration by William Jackson Hooker from Samuel Curtis' "Botanical Magazine," London, 1832.
EditorialTrigonocephalus lanceolatus, Print, Bothrops lanceolatus ? known as the fer-de-lance, Martinican pit viper, and Martinique lancehead ? is a species of pit viper generally considered endemic to the island of Martinique. No one has satisfactorily explain...
EditorialTrigonocephalus lanceolatus, Print, Bothrops lanceolatus ? known as the fer-de-lance, Martinican pit viper, and Martinique lancehead ? is a species of pit viper generally considered endemic to the island of Martinique. No one has satisfactorily explain...
EditorialSpear thistle, Cirsium vulgare (Carduus lanceolatus). Handcoloured copperplate engraving after an illustration by James Sowerby from James Smith's English Botany, London, 1793.
EditorialGarrulus Lanceolatus, Black-headed Jay or Lanceolated Jay. Birds from the Himalaya Mountains, engraving 1831 by Elizabeth Gould and John Gould. John Gould was working as a taxidermist,he was known as the 'bird-stuffer', by the Zoological Society. Gould...
EditorialGarrulus Lanceolatus, Black-headed Jay or Lanceolated Jay. Birds from the Himalaya Mountains, engraving 1831 by Elizabeth Gould and John Gould. John Gould was working as a taxidermist,he was known as the 'bird-stuffer', by the Zoological Society. Gould...
EditorialLance beard-heath or lanceolate leucopogon, Leucopogon lanceolatus, native to Australia. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Swan after an illustration by William Jackson Hooker from Samuel Curtis' "Botanical Magazine," London, 1832.