image
miscneg_0023 Snowflake
Bentley, W. A. (Wilson Alwyn), 1865-1931
Glass plate negative from the Bentley Snow Crystal Collection.
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Bentley Snowflake 342, c. 1890
Bentley, W. A (Wilson Alwyn) 1865-1931
1890
Alternate ID: SPI_274. Wilson A. Bentley first became fascinated with snow during his childhood on a Vermont farm, and he experimented for years with ways to view individual snowflakes in order to study their crystalline structure. He eventually attached a camera to his microscope, and in 1885 he successfully photographed the flakes. This photomicrograph and more than five thousand others supported the belief that no two snowflakes are alike, ...
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miscneg_0022 Snowflake
Bentley, W. A. (Wilson Alwyn), 1865-1931
Glass plate negative from the Bentley Snow Crystal Collection.
Get full image from Buffalo Museum of Scienceimage
miscneg_0026 Snowflake
Bentley, W. A. (Wilson Alwyn), 1865-1931
Glass plate negative from the Bentley Snow Crystal Collection.
Get full image from Buffalo Museum of Scienceimage
miscneg_0027 Snowflake
Bentley, W. A. (Wilson Alwyn), 1865-1931
Glass plate negative from the Bentley Snow Crystal Collection.
Get full image from Buffalo Museum of Scienceimage
miscneg_0024 Snowflake
Bentley, W. A. (Wilson Alwyn), 1865-1931
Glass plate negative from the Bentley Snow Crystal Collection.
Get full image from Buffalo Museum of Scienceimage
miscneg_0030 Snowflake
Bentley, W. A. (Wilson Alwyn), 1865-1931
Glass plate negative from the Bentley Snow Crystal Collection.
Get full image from Buffalo Museum of Scienceimage
miscneg_0032 Snowflake
Bentley, W. A. (Wilson Alwyn), 1865-1931
Glass plate negative from the Bentley Snow Crystal Collection.
Get full image from Buffalo Museum of Scienceimage
miscneg_0028 Snowflake
Bentley, W. A. (Wilson Alwyn), 1865-1931
Glass plate negative from the Bentley Snow Crystal Collection.
Get full image from Buffalo Museum of Scienceimage
miscneg_0029 Snowflake
Bentley, W. A. (Wilson Alwyn), 1865-1931
Glass plate negative from the Bentley Snow Crystal Collection.
Get full image from Buffalo Museum of Scienceimage
miscneg_0020 Snowflake
Bentley, W. A. (Wilson Alwyn), 1865-1931
Glass plate negative from the Bentley Snow Crystal Collection.
Get full image from Buffalo Museum of Scienceimage
miscneg_0031 Snowflake
Bentley, W. A. (Wilson Alwyn), 1865-1931
Glass plate negative from the Bentley Snow Crystal Collection.
Get full image from Buffalo Museum of Scienceimage
miscneg_0025 Snowflake
Bentley, W. A. (Wilson Alwyn), 1865-1931
Glass plate negative from the Bentley Snow Crystal Collection.
Get full image from Buffalo Museum of Scienceimage
miscneg_0021 Snowflake
Bentley, W. A. (Wilson Alwyn), 1865-1931
Glass plate negative from the Bentley Snow Crystal Collection.
Get full image from Buffalo Museum of Scienceimage
Wilson Bentley's Snowflake 482, c. 1890
Bentley, W. A (Wilson Alwyn) 1865-1931
1890
Alternate ID: SPI_270. Wilson A. Bentley first became fascinated with snow during his childhood on a Vermont farm, and he experimented for years with ways to view individual snowflakes in order to study their crystalline structure. He eventually attached a camera to his microscope, and in 1885 he successfully photographed the flakes. This photomicrograph and more than five thousand others supported the belief that no two snowflakes are alike, ...
Get full image from Smithsonian Institution Archivesimage
Wilson Bentley's Snowflake 562, c. 1890
Bentley, W. A (Wilson Alwyn) 1865-1931
1890
Alternate ID: SPI_271. Wilson A. Bentley first became fascinated with snow during his childhood on a Vermont farm, and he experimented for years with ways to view individual snowflakes in order to study their crystalline structure. He eventually attached a camera to his microscope, and in 1885 he successfully photographed the flakes. This photomicrograph and more than five thousand others supported the belief that no two snowflakes are alike, ...
Get full image from Smithsonian Institution Archivesimage
Wilson Bentley's Snowflake 80 c. 1890
Bentley, W. A (Wilson Alwyn) 1865-1931
1890
Alternate ID: SPI_262. Wilson A. Bentley first became fascinated with snow during his childhood on a Vermont farm, and he experimented for years with ways to view individual snowflakes in order to study their crystalline structure. He eventually attached a camera to his microscope, and in 1885 he successfully photographed the flakes. This photomicrograph and more than five thousand others supported the belief that no two snowflakes are alike, ...
Get full image from Smithsonian Institution Archivesimage
Wilson Bentley's Snowflake 1205 c. 1890
Bentley, W. A (Wilson Alwyn) 1865-1931
1890
Alternate ID: SPI_263. Wilson A. Bentley first became fascinated with snow during his childhood on a Vermont farm, and he experimented for years with ways to view individual snowflakes in order to study their crystalline structure. He eventually attached a camera to his microscope, and in 1885 he successfully photographed the flakes. This photomicrograph and more than five thousand others supported the belief that no two snowflakes are alike, ...
Get full image from Smithsonian Institution Archivesimage
Wilson Bentley's Snowflake 1225, c. 1890
Bentley, W. A (Wilson Alwyn) 1865-1931
1890
Alternate ID: SPI_272. Wilson A. Bentley first became fascinated with snow during his childhood on a Vermont farm, and he experimented for years with ways to view individual snowflakes in order to study their crystalline structure. He eventually attached a camera to his microscope, and in 1885 he successfully photographed the flakes. This photomicrograph and more than five thousand others supported the belief that no two snowflakes are alike, ...
Get full image from Smithsonian Institution Archives