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"The Mammals of #Australia" (1871) by J.L.G. Krefft includes #SciArt by the amazing Scott sisters, Harriet Morgan and Helena Forde. Explore it for #WomensHistoryMonth in #BHLib thanks to @SILibraries: https://t.co/WVPj5L3K81 #WomenInScience #histsci #wildoz
Virgin Islands Passionflowers (Passiflora murucuja) for #FloraFriday! #SciArt by Jean-Theodore Descourtilz for Michel Etienne Descourtilz, Flore pittoresque et médicale des Antilles, V. 1 Ct. 1 (1821). Contributed to #BHLib by the #MertzLibrary of @NYBG: https://t.co/gMSMugGoMr
"Birds of Canada" (1934), by Percy Algernon Taverner with #SciArt by Allan Brooks, is one of the best accounts of the #birds occurring in #Canada. For #Feathursday, learn more about this work in our latest blog post from @MuseumofNature: https://t.co/3yoSgmISMc
The European roller (Coracias garrulus) for #Feathursday! #SciArt by Archibald Thorburn for Lilford's "Coloured figures of the birds of the British Islands" v. 2 (1885-1897). In #BHLib via @AMNH: https://t.co/GZymSNrxTn #bird
Today is #IntlForestDay - a day to raise awareness of the importance of #forests. Celebrate by exploring the #trees & shrubs of Europe with "Flore forestière" (1872), illustrated with 18 chromolithographs depicting 350 figures. In #BHLib via @mobotgarden: https://t.co/RoyU8Yl1Mh
The feathertail glider (Acrobates pygmaeus), native to eastern #Australia, is the smallest known mammal capable of gliding flight. #SciArt by James Sowerby for "Zoology of New Holland" (1794) by George Shaw. In #BHLib via @bhl_au @museumsvictoria: https://t.co/CNsRM9AVWz #wildoz
Konjac (Amorphophallus konjac), also known as Devil's Tongue and Voodoo Lily for #FloraFriday! #SciArt by Walter Hood Fitch for Curtis's Botanical Magazine, Vol. 101 (1875). Contributed to #BHLib by the Peter H. Raven Library of the @mobotgarden: https://t.co/uKQJmy03kO
Red bird of paradise (Caesalpinia pulcherrima). #SciArt by Sydenham Teast Edwards for Curtis's Botanical Magazine, v. 25 (1807). In #BHLib via @mobotgarden: https://t.co/BzjJKqkNVr #botany #botanicalart
#Cacti #SciArt of Cereus hildmannianus (Fig 1) & Cereus repandus (Figs 2 & 3) by botanical artist Mary Emily Eaton for #WomensHistoryMonth. Published in "The Cactaceae" v. 2 (1920) by Nathaniel Lord Britton & Joseph Nelson Rose. In #BHLib via @NYBG: https://t.co/iHkFA0nee3
#Orchids (Cirrhopetalum fletcheranum). #SciArt by Matilda Smith for Curtis's Botanical Magazine, Vol. 141 (1915). Contributed to #BHLib by the Peter H. Raven Library of the @mobotgarden: https://t.co/0r87SeTi3R -- #WomensHistoryMonth #WomeninNatHist #WomeninScience