1960s: Flask sits on counter near stand with laboratory glassware. Scientist squeezes bladder on laboratory glassware suspended over dish of water.
1960s: Flask sits on counter near stand with laboratory glassware. Scientist squeezes bladder on laboratory glassware suspended over dish of water.
Bridgeman Images Details
Laboratory tests on gasoline at a chemical and physical research laboratory in the United States.
Men conduct various laboratory tests on gasoline in the United States. View of a laboratory setting with test tubes, beakers, and other equipment. Tests conducted at the chemical and physical research laboratory to increase the yield, develop and improve distillation processes. Men perform the tests. Man stands near miniature stills for conducting experiments. Man draws liquid from a cask. Location: United States USA. Date: 1924.
Low angle Laboratory desert two or three story
News Clip: AIDS Drug
Video footage from the KXAS-TV/NBC station in Fort Worth, Texas, in support of a story about an AIDS drug developed by Carrington Laboratories in Irving, Texas utilizing aloe vera extract. Terry Pulse, M.D. says the drug eliminated his patients' symptoms. This story aired at 10 PM.
DELEGATES VISIT SHIP LABORATORY
Feltham. <br/> <br/>Newspaper cutting on file. <br/> <br/>GV. Exterior of the 'Ship Hydrodynamics Laboratory of the National Physical Laboratory'. CU. Plaque on exterior wall naming the building. VS. Inside laboratory of the massive water tank with a machine making waves, a model of ship rides up and down on large overhead carriage during tests. MS. Man at control during experiment. MS. Woman working out a problem with a slide rule. CU. Model ship on water. VS. Model boats on large water tank during experiments. CS. Tests going on in high velocity water flow tunnel. VS. Delegates from various countries visiting the laboratory and looking at tests being made. <br/> <br/>(Orig. Neg.)
Paramount
Scientists at work in Hiroshima laboratory in 1950s
1950s
labs - research - interior laboratory - Singapore research laboratory - six young men look into microscopes - insert slides - take notes
SANDIA LABORATORIES
VARIOUS AERIAL SHOTS OF SANDIA LABORATORIES IN ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO. SILENT COLOR. CI: SPACE: LABORATORIES, SANDIA LABORATORIES.
1920s NEWSREELS
TOWER BUILT TO PROVE EINSTEIN'S THEORY. POTSDAM, GERMANY, 9/21/21. EINSTEIN THEORY OF RELATIVITY IS TESTED IN POTSDAM GERMANY WITH LARGE LABORATORY BEING BUILT FOR EXPERIMENTS. CU TOWER LABORATORY. COSTLY STRUCTURE, WITH EXTENSIVE LABORATORY EQUIPMENT, IS BUILT BY EXPONENTS OF SCIENTIST'S DISCOVERY. MODERN BUILDING, BIZARRE STRUCTURE.
Cream Grading in Saskatchewan
Various shots of Department of Agriculture technician at work in laboratory.
LABORATORY SCENES
An obese laboratory mouse. Microscope slide images of blood samples and cells. Laboratory workers looking in microscopes and at laboratory equipment.
SJT LES PETITS PLATS DANS L'ECRAN / BOULETTES D'AVESNES
DN-B-276 Beta SP
[Lenox Hill Hospital - Pathological Laboratory]
New Laboratory Model Opens; 06/28/99
SPACE STATION: scientists unveil a new Space Station Laboratory Model; Asst shots of new lab model in a large hangar, VIPs mill about and look at model
Freshwater bryozoans under microscope, Class Phylactolaemata
Freshwater bryozoans under microscope, Class Phylactolaemata, Order Plumatellida. Filter feeders. Similar to worms in Sabellida family
Science, pipette and test tube in laboratory for research, medical innovation and chemistry experiment. Woman, hands and healthcare development for dna sample analysis, microbiome or biotechnology
Science, pipette and test tube in laboratory for research, medical innovation and chemistry experiment. Woman, hands and healthcare development for dna sample analysis, microbiome or biotechnology
Scientists in lab coats working in laboratory
Dietary supplements, too addictive sweets
80714 AIRPLANE CRASH RESEARCH 1950s NACA / NASA LEWIS FLIGHT PROPULSION LAB
Produced in the late 1940s or early 1950s, this NACA film shows the work at the NACA Lewis Flight Propulsion Lab, where researchers study the spread of fires in an airplane crash.<p><p>The history of Lewis Field begins with the National Air Races, held in Cleveland throughout the 1930s. Conducted at what is now Hopkins International Airport, the races were a major aviation event each year. Thousands of people came to view them. To accommodate the large crowds, bleachers and a parking lot were built on a field just west of the airport. <p><p>When the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, NASA's predecessor, decided in 1939 that it needed a new laboratory to supplement the Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory near Hampton, Virginia, the city and Chamber of Commerce proposed Cleveland as the site. However, the Calif. aircraft industry was successful in getting the lab -- now the Ames Research Center --built at Moffett Field near Sunnyvale instead.<p><p>When Charles A. Lindbergh returned to the U.S. from Europe in 1939 on the eve of World War II, he was worried that engine developments in England and Germany were a threat to America. Lindbergh chaired a Special Committee on Aeronautical Research Facilities which recommended building a new engine research laboratory near the aircraft engine companies.<p><p>Cleveland competed with 19 other sites for the new lab. Among the criteria that were being used for selection were: 1 A site adjoining a suitable airport, 2 Power and water resources for wind tunnel operation, 3 Location near aircraft engine companies, and 4 A location that is not vulnerable to enemy attack. The strategic vulnerability of the NACA's other two laboratories to potential future enemies made the Midwest appear an attractive location. The fields to the west of Cleveland's airport were select for the site of the new Aircraft Engine Research Laboratory.<p><p>Groundbreaking ceremonies for the new lab were held at the site in Cleveland on January 23, 1941, and the new NACA Aircraft Engine Research Laboratory was born. In April 1947 the Cleveland laboratory was renamed the Flight Propulsion Research Laboratory to mark its transition from an engine laboratory, charged with assisting industry with its wartime development problems, to a laboratory with the freedom to explore areas in propulsion research that seemed to hold promise for the future. The following year, after the death of George W. Lewis, the Director of Aeronautical Research for the NACA, the laboratory was renamed in his honor as the Lewis Flight Propulsion Laboratory. On October 1, 1958, when the NACA dissolved and NASA was born, the lab became part of the new agency and was renamed the NASA Lewis Research Center.<p><p>On March 1, 1999, the Lewis Research Center was officially renamed the NASA John H. Glenn Research Center at Lewis Field. The name recognizes the contributions of two outstanding men, John H. Glenn and George W. Lewis. The designation of the historic site upon which the center is built as Lewis Field celebrates the legacy of George W. Lewis.<p><p> film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com
1960s: Flask sits on counter near stand with laboratory glassware. Scientist squeezes bladder on laboratory glassware suspended over dish of water. Man adjusts flask on stand.
1960s: Flask sits on counter near stand with laboratory glassware. Scientist squeezes bladder on laboratory glassware suspended over dish of water. Man adjusts flask on stand.
Bridgeman Images Details
Panning science laboratory
Panning science laboratory