Abril82012
5AM
De la Casa de las Termitas..precioso!!!

http://lacasadelastermitas.blogspot.com.es/

De la Casa de las Termitas..
precioso!!!

http://lacasadelastermitas.blogspot.com.es/

5AM
5AM
muscavomitoria:

Norma Shearer in Lady of the Night, 1925

muscavomitoria:

Norma Shearer in Lady of the Night, 1925

(Fuente: bobertsbobgomery)

5AM
muscavomitoria:

Norma Shearer in Lady of the Night, 1925

muscavomitoria:

Norma Shearer in Lady of the Night, 1925

(Fuente: bobertsbobgomery)

5AM
marlenamalheur:

rhea137:

cloud-castle-lake:

hexavalentchromium:

medieval:

MARZAL DE SAX, AndrésRetable of St George (detail)c. 1400Tempera on wood, 670 x 486 cm (full retable)Victoria and Albert Museum, London
via www.wga.hu

marlenamalheur:

rhea137:

cloud-castle-lake:

hexavalentchromium:

medieval:

MARZAL DE SAX, Andrés
Retable of St George (detail)
c. 1400
Tempera on wood, 670 x 486 cm (full retable)
Victoria and Albert Museum, London

via www.wga.hu

Abril72012
http://stephenmackey.com/menu.htm

De Stephen Mackey
Visitad su web, es una delicia…
Que músicas!!!!

http://stephenmackey.com/menu.htm

De Stephen Mackey

Visitad su web, es una delicia…

Que músicas!!!!

5AM
“The Moon’s Trousseau,” by Stephen Mackey.

“The Moon’s Trousseau,” by Stephen Mackey.

Febrero212012
Diciembre172011
biomedicalephemera:

Mystacina tuberculata and Molossus norfolcensis [now Mormopterus norfolkensis?] - The New Zealand Lesser Short-Tailed Bat and East-Coast Free-Tailed Bat (?)
These scientific names are getting harder and harder to figure out the modern equivalents to…
Anyway. There’s a long-tailed bat that’s native to New Zealand, but it looks nothing like the bat depicted as Molossus norfolcensis. The bat is clearly a member of the family Molossidae - the free-tailed bats - but it’s unclear which specific species this one is. The east-coast free-tailed bat has a range most likely to include any of the New Zealand islands, as well as having a similar facial structure as the bat depicted here.
The Zoology of the Voyage of the H.M.S. Erebus & Terror, 1839-1843. John Richardson, 1845.

biomedicalephemera:

Mystacina tuberculata and Molossus norfolcensis [now Mormopterus norfolkensis?] - The New Zealand Lesser Short-Tailed Bat and East-Coast Free-Tailed Bat (?)

These scientific names are getting harder and harder to figure out the modern equivalents to…

Anyway. There’s a long-tailed bat that’s native to New Zealand, but it looks nothing like the bat depicted as Molossus norfolcensis. The bat is clearly a member of the family Molossidae - the free-tailed bats - but it’s unclear which specific species this one is. The east-coast free-tailed bat has a range most likely to include any of the New Zealand islands, as well as having a similar facial structure as the bat depicted here.

The Zoology of the Voyage of the H.M.S. Erebus & Terror, 1839-1843. John Richardson, 1845.

(vía victoriasrustyknickers)

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