phone Help-contact

Science Source ftp Apr 2015

EN_01170126_0272
Science Source ftp Apr 2015
  • 30,00 EUR

    Making print for private purpose, storage in computer memory, no distribution rights.

  • 40,00 EUR

    Strictly for editorial, single use on a personal (nonprofit) web site, Internet portal, social media (Facebook, Instagram etc.), blog for 1 year. Not for resale. Maximum picture size 2000px.

  • 75,00 EUR

    Strictly for editorial, single use on a commercial web site, Internet portal, social media (Facebook, Instagram etc.), blog for 1 year. Not for resale. Maximum picture size 2000px.

  • 90,00 EUR

    Strictly for editorial, single use, inside of newspaper, magazine, book (including digital version), one edition, one single country. Not for resale.

Gross prices
Contact us to calculate price for another use. Prices only for online sales.
Joseph Carey Merrick (1862-1890) was an English man with severe deformities who was exhibited as a human curiosity named the Elephant Man. He became well known in London society after he went to live at the London Hospital. Although his condition was incurable, Merrick was allowed to stay at the hospital for the remainder of his life. English surgeon Frederick Treves visited him daily and the pair developed quite a close friendship. Merrick was originally thought to be suffering from elephantiasis. He died in 1890, aged 27. The official cause of death was asphyxia, although Treves, who dissected the body, said that Merrick had died of a dislocated neck. The exact cause of Merrick's deformities is unclear. The dominant theory was that Merrick suffered from neurofibromatosis type I. In 1986, a new theory emerged that he had Proteus syndrome. In 2001 it was proposed that Merrick had suffered from a combination of neurofibromatosis type I and Proteus syndrome. DNA tests conducted on his hair and bones have proven inconclusive.
2015-04-07
East News
Science Source
Science Source
BU9149
2,98MB
20cm x 35cm by 300dpi
1862, 1886, 1890, 1986, 19TH, 2001, 27, A, ABNORMAL, AFTER, AGED, ALLOWED, ALTHOUGH, AN, AND, ART, ARTWORK, AS, ASPHYXIA, AT, BE, BECAME, BODY, BONES, BW, CAREY, CAUSE, CENTURY, CLOSE, COMBINATION, CONDITION, CONDUCTED, CONGENITAL, CURIOSITY, DAILY, DEATH, DEFORMED, DEFORMITIES, DEFORMITY, DEVELOPED, DIED, DISEASE, DISLOCATED, DISORDER, DISSECTED, DNA, DOMINANT, DRAWING, ELEPHANT, ELEPHANTIASIS, EMERGED, ENGLISH, ENGRAVING, EUROPEAN, EXACT, EXHIBITED, FAMOUS, FIGURE, FOR, FREDERICK, FRIENDSHIP, FROM, GENETIC, HAD, HAIR, HAVE, HE, HIM, HIS, HISTORIC, HISTORICAL, HISTORY, HOSPITAL, HUMAN, I, ILLUSTRATION, IMPORTANT, IN, INCONCLUSIVE, INCURABLE, IS, IT, J, JOHN, JOSEPH, KNOWN, LIFE, LIVE, LONDON, MALE, MAN, MEDICAL, MEN, MERRICK, NAMED, NECK, NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, NEW, NOTABLE, OF, OFFICIAL, ON, ORIGINALLY, PAIR, PATHOLOGY, PEOPLE, PERSON, PERSONALITIES, PERSONALITY, PORTRAIT, PROPOSED, PROTEUS, PROVEN, QUITE, RECKLINGHAUSEN, REMAINDER, SAID, SCIENCE, SEVERE, SOCIETY, SOURCE, STAY, SUFFERED, SUFFERING, SURGEON, SYNDROME, TESTS, THAT, THE, THEORY, THOUGHT, TO, TREVES, TYPE, UNCLEAR, VICTORIAN, VISITED, VON, WAS, WELL, WELL-KNOWN, WENT, WHO, WIEDEMANN, WITH,