photo: Creative Commons / Jurii
Neon.
photo: Creative Commons / Aiyizo
Gallium.
photo: Creative Commons
Elements of the Thracian Tomb of Kazanlak. Traditional Bulgarian culture contains mainly Slavic and other Orthodox heritage, along with Thracian, Greek, Roman, Ottoman and Celtic influences.
photo: PDPhoto.com
Orion Nebula Images - Public Domain - Stock Photos
photo: Creative Commons / Billy Hathorn
Athens United Methodist Church
photo: Creative Commons
Glassmaking was a highly developed art.
photo: Creative Commons / Chaerani
Laksa is a popular spicy noodle soup from Peranakan culture also known as Baba and Nyonya, which is a merger of Chinese and Malay elements found in Malaysia and Singapore, and to a lesser extent Indonesia.
photo: Creative Commons / Peregrine981
Laurier House
photo: Creative Commons / Eternalsleeper
Radium Hot Springs, British Columbia
photo: Creative Commons / Fluffball70
A typical propane barbecue grill in an urban backyard
photo: Creative Commons / Bibi Saint-Pol
Model of a typical Doric temple, the Temple of Aphaia on Aegina (Glyptothek, Munich).
photo: Creative Commons
A picture by Gustave Doré of Mother Goose reading written (literary) fairy tales
photo: Creative Commons
One of the doors of the mosque in the early twentieth
photo: Creative Commons
İzmir Clock Tower (1901)
photo: Creative Commons / Copyright 2006
Museumsquartier
photo: Creative Commons
Center of Vienna architecture
photo: Creative Commons
Microchips (EPROM memory) with a transparent window, showing the integrated circuit inside. Note the fine silver-colored wires that connect the integrated circuit to the pins of the package. The window allows the memory contents of the chip to be erased, by exposure to strong ultraviolet light in an eraser device.
photo: Creative Commons
Gamayun, one of three prophetic birds of Russian folklore, alongside Alkonost and Sirin (painting by Viktor Vasnetsov, 1897).
photo: Creative Commons / Ivan Bilibin
Baba Yaga,
photo: Creative Commons / Woudloper
Kimberlite is a type of potassic volcanic rock best known for sometimes containing diamonds. It is named after the town of Kimberley in South Africa, where the discovery of an 83.5-carat (16.7 g) diamond in 1871 spawned a diamond rush, eventually creating the Big Hole.
photo: Creative Commons / Martin451
Temple of Aphaia on the island of Egina. The Temple of Aphaia (or Aphaea) is located within a sanctuary complex dedicated to the goddess Aphaia on the Greek island of Aigina, which lies in the Saronic Gulf. It stands on a circa 160 m peak on the eastern side of the island approximately 13 km east by road from the main port.
photo: Creative Commons / Martin451
Temple oif Aphaea on the island of Egina. The Temple of Aphaia (or Aphaea) is located within a sanctuary complex dedicated to the goddess Aphaia on the Greek island of Aigina, which lies in the Saronic Gulf. It stands on a circa 160 m peak on the eastern side of the island approximately 13 km east by road from the main port.[
photo: Creative Commons
Celtic yin yang motif on an enameled bronze plaque (mid-1st century AD)
photo: Creative Commons / Maurits90
Entrance of the museum
photo: Creative Commons
Column depicting Merenptah making an offering to Ptah.
photo: Creative Commons
Upper Egyptian folk musicians from Kom Ombo
photo: Nasa Photo
Electronic Nose - ENose (Nasa Photo) KLeo
photo: Nasa Photo
Electronic Nose - ENose (Nasa Photo) KLeo
photo: Nasa Photo
Electronic Nose - ENose (Nasa Photo) KLeo
photo: Creative Commons
The Romanesque portal at Moissac—see text. Detail of the tympanum here