Click Here for More Images from iStock- 15% off with coupon 15FREEIMAGES 
3D Render of a Topographic Map of the Frankfurt am Main area, Hessen, Germany.\nAll source data is in the public domain.\nContains modified Copernicus Sentinel data (Jul 2019) courtesy of ESA. URL of source image: https://scihub.copernicus.eu/dhus/#/home.\nRelief texture SRTM data courtesy of NASA. URL of source image: https://search.earthdata.nasa.gov/search/granules/collection-details?p=C1000000240-LPDAAC_ECS&q=srtm%201%20arc&ok=srtm%201%20arc
Common Buckeye butterfly (Junonia coenia) feeding on yellow wildflowers, wings wide open, on a sunny spring day.
The marbled white - Melanargia galathea sucks nectar with its trunk from the blossom of the Origanum vulgare - Oregano or wild Marjoram
Credit: https://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/images\n\nTake a virtual trip to Latvia today and enhance your understanding of this beautiful land. Get ready to be captivated by the geography, history, and culture of Latvia
A vintage map of the Republic of East Germany shows Berlin divided before the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Great spangled fritillary on joe-pye weed in summer, top or dorsal view, showing the pattern on the back of the wings. The Latin word fritillus means chessboard or dice box. Fritillary is also a checkered flower.
A Lorquin's Admiral Butterfly gathers nectar from a bloom in Colusa County, California
3d forest in shape of Serbia map, isolated on white
3D Render of a Topographic Map of Antwerpen, Belgium.\nAll source data is in the public domain.\nContains modified Copernicus Sentinel data (Aug 2019) courtesy of ESA. URL of source image: https://scihub.copernicus.eu/dhus/#/home.\nRelief texture SRTM data courtesy of NASA. URL of source image: https://search.earthdata.nasa.gov/search/granules/collection-details?p=C1000000240-LPDAAC_ECS&q=srtm%201%20arc&ok=srtm%201%20arc
Lepidoptera insect on wild plants, North China
This picture was taken in Raw format and edited in Adobe Lightroom.
Credit: https://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/images\n\nTake a virtual trip to Denmark today and enhance your understanding of this beautiful land. Get ready to be captivated by the geography, history, and culture of Denmark
Southern White Admiral butterflies (Limenitis reducta) viewed on top
Great spangled fritillary seeming to smile as its proboscis goes into a flower of joe-pye weed. Sharply focused on the eyes and head. The butterfly's striking pattern inspires its name. The Latin word fritillus means chessboard or dice box. The spangles are the silvery white spots on the underwings.
Common brown butterfly extreme macro shot illustrates its captivating details from wings and antennas
Aglais urticae is a common resident. Migrants are also often seen. Its distribution probably has not changed during the last century. However, the Dutch Monitoring Scheme shows a decline in numbers in the 1990s; the cause is not known.\nAdults can be seen looking for nectar in gardens, parks and on roadside verges. \nThe caterpillars feed on the smaller plants of Urtica dioica in very sunny, open spots.\nThe species flies in two generations from the beginning of March until the end of October. The adult butterfly hibernates in cool, dark places, such as barns, attics, or hollow trees.\n\nThe Picture is made along a small Brook in the Eifel (Germany) in halfway August 2021.
3D Render of a Topographic Map of the Federal State of Baden-Württemberg, Germany.
The map, Araschnia levana a butterfly of the family Nymphalidae
Detailed close up of a Heat Fritillary butterfly sitting on a white flower with wings spread
Credit: https://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/images\n\nTake a virtual trip to Bosnia and Herzegovina today and enhance your understanding of this beautiful land. Get ready to be captivated by the geography, history, and culture of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Painted lady butterfly, vanessa cardui on flower green background
Aerial picture of Königs Wusterhausen in Brandenburg, Germany. Traveling photography for tourism concept from the air.
map, outline of Ireland designed with clover
Brenthis daphne, the marbled fritillary, is a butterfly of the family Nymphalidae.\nDescription:\nBrenthis daphne has a wingspan of 30–44 millimeters. Wings are rather rounded, the basic color of the upper side of the forewings is bright orange, with an incomplete black marginal band. The underside of the hindwings have a yellowish postdiscal band and the marginal area is completely suffused with purple, with a marble effect (hence the common name).  The quadrangular patch on the underside hindwing is partially shaded orange pink to outer side. The chrysalis has two dorsal rows of thorns with bright spots and a bright metallic shine.\nThis species is very similar to the lesser marbled fritillary (Brenthis ino), but the latter is slightly smaller and the coloration of said patch is completely yellow.\nBiology:\nThe butterfly flies from late May to early August depending on the location. The eggs are laid separately in July on the leaves of the host plants. The larvae feed on brambles (Rubus fruticosus), raspberry (Rubus idaeus), Rubus caesius, Rubus sachalinensis, Sanguisorba officinalis and Filipendula species, while adults usually feed on nectar from brambles, thistles and other flowers. This species is univoltine. It overwinters at the caterpillar stage in the egg shell. \nDistribution and habitat:\nThis widespread species is present in the Palearctic ecozone from the southern parts of the continental Europe (northern Spain, southern France, Germany, Italy and eastwards to Slovakia and Greece), up to Caucasus, western Siberia. It prefers warm and sunny forest edges, woodland and bushy areas where the host plants grow, at an elevation of 75–1,750 meters above sea level (source Wikipedia).\n\nThis Picture is made during a Vacation in Bulgaria in May 2018.
The shape of Virginia grown in trees.
3D Render of a colorful Topographic Map of Butte County.  \nAll source data is in the public domain.\nContains modified Copernicus Sentinel data (March 2022) courtesy of ESA. \nURL of source image: https://scihub.copernicus.eu/dhus/#/home.\nRelief texture: 3DEP data, courtesy of USGS The National Map. \nURL of source image: https://apps.nationalmap.gov/downloader/#/
Shooting at 18/135, 500 iso, f 13, 1/100 second
Credit: https://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/images\n\nTake a virtual trip to Slovenia today and enhance your understanding of this beautiful land. Get ready to be captivated by the geography, history, and culture of Slovenia
Amazon delta. 3D illustration with detailed planet surface. 3D model of planet created and rendered in Cheetah3D software, 7 Mar 2017. Some layers of planet surface use textures furnished by NASA, Blue Marble collection: http://visibleearth.nasa.gov/view_cat.php?categoryID=1484
Green fields and blue sky in spring and early summer
Free Images: "bestof:Araschnia levana (map butterfly), Summer generation, Arnhem, the Netherlands.jpg 51 950488 5 851818 en Araschnia levana map butterfly Summer generation Arnhem"
Terms of Use   Search of the Day