photo: Creative Commons / Duke Arc Terex
Walking down Marietta Street NW at the T-bone intersection of Cone Street NW gives one of many ground level views of Downtown Atlanta.
photo: Creative Commons / Pro
Female Mallard with head down in the water. The aforementioned confounds analysis of the evolution considerably. Analyses of good samples of mtDNA sequences give the confusing picture[24] one expects from a wide-ranging species that has evolved probably not much earlier than the Plio-/Pleistocene boundary, around 2 mya.
photo: anzaksite
The Dur Yolcu Memorial on the hillside above Kilitbahir, Gallipoli ,Turkey.
photo: Creative Commons
Marsh's now-obsolete 1880 reconstruction of H. regalis
photo: Creative Commons
Albert Koch's "Hydrarchos" fossil skeleton from 1845
photo: Creative Commons / Vdegroot
Catacombs of Paris, William T. Vollmann's Rising Up and Rising Down: Some Thoughts on Violence, Freedom, and Urgent Means begins with a section titled "Three Meditation's on Death". The first meditation, entitled "Catacomb Thoughts", is a reflection on the Catacombs of Paris.
photo: Creative Commons
Size comparison of Psittacosaurus to a human. Each grid segment represents one square metre
photo: Creative Commons / FunkMonk
Parasaurolophus
photo: Creative Commons
Close-up of Styracosaurus albertensis skull, American Museum of Natural History
photo: Creative Commons
A reliquary in the church of San Pedro, Ayerbe, Spain
photo: Creative Commons / Coopertje
Hampshire sheep
photo: Creative Commons
Fossil cast of NGMC 91, a probable specimen of Sinornithosaurus
photo: Creative Commons / Haplochromis
South American lungfish
photo: Creative Commons
Fossil remains found in Maidstone in 1834
photo: Creative Commons / Terence
Ho mok pla, fish curry paté in thailand
photo: Creative Commons / Midnightblueowl
Horned God
photo: Creative Commons / Fir0002
Elephant using its feet to crush a watermelon prior to eating it
photo: Creative Commons
Illustration of fossil Iguanodon teeth with a modern iguana jaw from Mantell's 1825 paper describing Iguanodon.
photo: Public Domain / IbRas
Østerlars Church, one of Bornholm's five round churches.
photo: Creative Commons
Tooth
photo: Creative Commons / Ericoides
Norman stonework
photo: Creative Commons / Dickbauch
Part of the outer ditch Excavation at Ave bury has been limited. In 1894 Sir Henry Meux put a trench through the bank, which gave the first indication that the earthwork was built in two phases.
photo: Creative Commons / Dinoguy2
Daspletosaurus skeleton
photo: Creative Commons / Queen of France
Amalthée et la chèvre de Jupiter (Amalthea and Jupiter's goat) Commissioned by the Queen of France in 1787 for the royal dairy at Rambouillet
photo: Creative Commons
Bisque head French Fashion doll from the 1870s
photo: Creative Commons
The dowry for the three virgins (Gentile da Fabriano, c. 1425, Pinacoteca Vaticana, Rome)
photo: Creative Commons / Bot
Jacopo Tintoretto 001
photo: Creative Commons
Female spouted figure, terracotta, Charsadda, Gandhara, 3rd–1st century BC Victoria and Albert Museum
photo: Creative Commons / Ailuro
Sagrada Família Crucifix in barcelona
photo: Creative Commons / Sergiodlarosa
Arctodus simus, also known as the giant short-faced bear, is an extinct species of bear. The genus Arctodus is known as the short-faced or bulldog bears. A. simus is the largest bear, and more generally, the largest mammalian land carnivore within the last 20,000 years. It was native to prehistoric North America from about 800 thousand years ago, and became extinct about 12,500 years ago. It was the largest terrestrial carnivore of its day. The largest mature males would have stood 1.8m (6 ft) a