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Image:BlankMap-World-v6-Borders.png – Version of v6 with borders around each country. Image:BlankMap-World-v7.png – Version of v4 with thin lines to join areas owned by the same country for one-click colouring and with dots for dependencies as well as sovereign territories (merged content from v5 and v6).
2008-03-12T00:20:02Z AMK1211 959x593 (174744 Bytes) Added borders: Light blue for water borders and black for land borders (international borders thicker). 2007-06-14T08:32:47Z Fibonacci 959x593 (80121 Bytes) Optimised code. 2006-07-12T23:00:30Z Theshibboleth 959x593 (90537 Bytes) The line framework around Alaska and Hawaii has been pushed a bit
A blank map of Europe using Wikipedia standard colors in SVG format, based on Image:BlankMap-Europe-v5.png. Note that the borders represent a second object "grouped" with the outline of Europe. Note that the borders represent a second object "grouped" with the outline of Europe.
Unenhanced photo of a red (monochrome) rainbow. Occasionally a shower may happen at sunrise or sunset, where the shorter wavelengths like blue and green have been scattered and essentially removed from the spectrum. Further scattering may occur due to the rain, and the result can be the rare and dramatic monochrome or red rainbow. [47]
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 9 January 2025. Flag with the colors of the rainbow This article is about rainbow colors in miscellaneous flags. For the LGBT pride flag, see Rainbow flag (LGBT). Illustration of a flag using prism and non-prism rainbow colors A rainbow flag is a multicolored flag consisting of the colors of the rainbow ...
A monochrome or red rainbow is an optical and meteorological phenomenon and a rare variation of the more commonly seen multicolored rainbow. Its formation process is identical to that of a normal rainbow (namely the reflection/refraction of light in water droplets), the difference being that a monochrome rainbow requires the sun to be close to ...
The Rainbow Portrait, c. 1600–02, attributed to Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger. Attributed to Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger, [68] perhaps the most heavily symbolic portrait of the queen is the Rainbow Portrait, so-called because the queen grasps a rainbow, at Hatfield House. It was painted around 1600–1602, when the queen was in her sixties.