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Volcano types (large print)

by Rnib

There are three types of volcano shown on this page. At the left is a composite volcano made up from alternating layers of rock and lava; at the top right is a shield volcano made from many layers of runny lava; and at the bottom right there is an ash volcano formed from lava and ash. Each diagram has a dashed line image border. At the bottom left of the page, stretching across the diagram, is a layer of molten magma (the mantle). In the middle of the diagram, the magma has forced its way through the Earth's crust and is erupting from the top of the volcano, and also through two smaller vents on either side. At the top right of the page is the much flatter form of a shield volcano with magma at the bottom of the diagram forcing its way through the Earth's crust. At the bottom right is an ash volcano. You can see the lava and ash forcing its way upward from the magma layer at the bottom of the page. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the right way up.

Volcano types (UEB uncontracted)

by Rnib

There are three types of volcano shown on this page. At the left is a composite volcano made up from alternating layers of rock and lava; at the top right is a shield volcano made from many layers of runny lava; and at the bottom right there is an ash volcano formed from lava and ash. Each diagram has a dashed line image border. At the bottom left of the page, stretching across the diagram, is a layer of molten magma (the mantle). In the middle of the diagram, the magma has forced its way through the Earth's crust and is erupting from the top of the volcano, and also through two smaller vents on either side. At the top right of the page is the much flatter form of a shield volcano with magma at the bottom of the diagram forcing its way through the Earth's crust. At the bottom right is an ash volcano. You can see the lava and ash forcing its way upward from the magma layer at the bottom of the page. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the right way up.

Volcano types (UEB contracted)

by Rnib

There are three types of volcano shown on this page. At the left is a composite volcano made up from alternating layers of rock and lava; at the top right is a shield volcano made from many layers of runny lava; and at the bottom right there is an ash volcano formed from lava and ash. Each diagram has a dashed line image border. At the bottom left of the page, stretching across the diagram, is a layer of molten magma (the mantle). In the middle of the diagram, the magma has forced its way through the Earth's crust and is erupting from the top of the volcano, and also through two smaller vents on either side. At the top right of the page is the much flatter form of a shield volcano with magma at the bottom of the diagram forcing its way through the Earth's crust. At the bottom right is an ash volcano. You can see the lava and ash forcing its way upward from the magma layer at the bottom of the page. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the right way up.

Composite Volcano (tactile)

by Rnib

This is a tactile diagram for GCSE students. The diagram shows a cross section of a composite volcano, with different textures indicating ash and lava, showing how the volcano builds up.

Cone Volcano (tactile)

by Rnib

This is a tactile diagram for GCSE level students. It shows the cross section of a cone volcano. Labels describe the shape and structure of the volcano, and students can feel the layers, and the lava rising up through the middle.

World maps of volcanoes and earthquakes (UEB contracted)

by Rnib

These pages show a map of the World showing the Volcanoes and Earthquakes with an accompanying key. It is a multi-page image set on three pages. Page 1: Keys to world maps of volcanoes and earthquakes. This page has two keys: the one on the left is the key to the world map of volcanoes; the one on the right is the key to the world map of earthquakes. Both keys show two-letter abbreviations for the continents. Down from these are examples of the symbols and textures used. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the right way up. Page 2: World map of volcanoes This is a map of the volcanoes on the surface of the earth framed by a dashed line image border. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the right way up. All landmasses are textured and sea areas are untextured. On the left of the page are North and South America, in the centre Europe and Africa and to the right Asia and Australasia. Small volcanoes are marked by dots and large ones by small triangles. These are shown on Keys to world maps of volcanoes and earthquakes. Page 3: World map of earthquakes This is a map showing where earthquakes have occurred on the surface of the earth. It is framed by a dashed line image border. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the right way up. All landmasses are textured and sea areas are untextured. On the left of the page are North and South America, in the centre Europe and Africa and to the right Asia and Australasia. Small earthquakes are marked by small dots and larger ones by larger dots. These are shown on Keys to world maps of volcanoes and earthquakes

World maps of volcanoes and earthquakes (large print)

by Rnib

These pages show a map of the World showing the Volcanoes and Earthquakes with an accompanying key. It is a multi-page image set on three pages. Page 1: Keys to world maps of volcanoes and earthquakes. This page has two keys: the one on the left is the key to the world map of volcanoes; the one on the right is the key to the world map of earthquakes. Both keys show two-letter abbreviations for the continents. Down from these are examples of the symbols and textures used. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the right way up. Page 2: World map of volcanoes This is a map of the volcanoes on the surface of the earth framed by a dashed line image border. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the right way up. All landmasses are textured and sea areas are untextured. On the left of the page are North and South America, in the centre Europe and Africa and to the right Asia and Australasia. Small volcanoes are marked by dots and large ones by small triangles. These are shown on Keys to world maps of volcanoes and earthquakes. Page 3: World map of earthquakes This is a map showing where earthquakes have occurred on the surface of the earth. It is framed by a dashed line image border. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the right way up. All landmasses are textured and sea areas are untextured. On the left of the page are North and South America, in the centre Europe and Africa and to the right Asia and Australasia. Small earthquakes are marked by small dots and larger ones by larger dots. These are shown on Keys to world maps of volcanoes and earthquakes

World maps of volcanoes and earthquakes (UEB uncontracted)

by Rnib

These pages show a map of the World showing the Volcanoes and Earthquakes with an accompanying key. It is a multi-page image set on three pages. Page 1: Keys to world maps of volcanoes and earthquakes. This page has two keys: the one on the left is the key to the world map of volcanoes; the one on the right is the key to the world map of earthquakes. Both keys show two-letter abbreviations for the continents. Down from these are examples of the symbols and textures used. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the right way up. Page 2: World map of volcanoes This is a map of the volcanoes on the surface of the earth framed by a dashed line image border. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the right way up. All landmasses are textured and sea areas are untextured. On the left of the page are North and South America, in the centre Europe and Africa and to the right Asia and Australasia. Small volcanoes are marked by dots and large ones by small triangles. These are shown on Keys to world maps of volcanoes and earthquakes. Page 3: World map of earthquakes This is a map showing where earthquakes have occurred on the surface of the earth. It is framed by a dashed line image border. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the right way up. All landmasses are textured and sea areas are untextured. On the left of the page are North and South America, in the centre Europe and Africa and to the right Asia and Australasia. Small earthquakes are marked by small dots and larger ones by larger dots. These are shown on Keys to world maps of volcanoes and earthquakes

How a Volcano is Formed (UEB contracted)

by Rnib

This is a tactile diagram for GCSE level students. It shows the cross-section of a volcano, with the magma, crater and main vent all labelled. The magma is textured, and the user can feel the layer of the volcano as a series of lines.

Shield Volcano (tactile)

by Rnib

This is a tactile diagram for GCSE level students. It shows the cross section of a shield volcano. Labels describe the shape and structure of the volcano, and users can feel the layers and the lava coming up through the middle.

World Map (Large Print)

by Rnib

This is a map of the world. The map is framed by a dashed image border. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the right way up. All land masses are textured (green) and sea areas are untextured (blue). On the left of the page are North and South America, in the centre Europe and Africa and to the right Asia and Australasia. Some areas have been given two-letter alphabetic labels due to space considerations. These are described in a key at the bottom left of the page.

Symbols & Trademarks (Tactile)

by Adrian Farnsworth

This is a four-page document showing commonly-used symbols and trademarks. There are four on page one, three on each of pages two and three, and two on page four. The Woolmark on page two is a registered trade mark of The Woolmark Company and the Golden Arches logo on page four is a registered trade mark of the McDonald's Corporation.

United Nations Logo (Tactile)

by Adrian Farnsworth

This is a tactile image of the United Nations logo. At the centre of the page is an image of the Earth seen from above showing its lines of latitude and longitude. It is surrounded by two olive branches representing peace. The shapes of the Earths land masses have been omitted in this tactile version.

Fossil fuel power station (UEB contracted)

by Rnib

This is a labelled cross section diagram of a fossil fuel power station, showing the process of producing electrical power from fossil fuels such coal, coke, gas and oil, and also wood and bio fuels (oils and gases from plant sources). There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the correct way up. The image is surrounded by a dashed line image border. The diagram is in four main sections. From left to right these are: the boiler, the steam turbine, the generator and the cooling tower. The fuel comes into the boiler on the left of the page through a pipe and is burnt to create a high temperature inside the boiler. To the right is the steam turbine. A pipe carries water from the bottom of the turbine enclosure to the left, into a heat exchanger in the boiler, where it is heated to create steam at high pressure. This travels to the right through a pipe to rotate the turbine blades at high speed. To the right, a generator, driven by the rotation of the turbine produces an alternating electric current, which is fed into the national electricity grid. To the right of the generator you can find a cooling tower. Hot water from a condenser in the turbine housing is pumped to water jets in the cooling tower and sprayed into a tank to cool. The cold water is then pumped back to the condenser in the turbine housing to condense the steam from the turbine.

Fossil fuel power station (large print)

by Rnib

This is a labelled cross section diagram of a fossil fuel power station, showing the process of producing electrical power from fossil fuels such coal, coke, gas and oil, and also wood and bio fuels (oils and gases from plant sources). There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the correct way up. The image is surrounded by a dashed line image border. The diagram is in four main sections. From left to right these are: the boiler, the steam turbine, the generator and the cooling tower. The fuel comes into the boiler on the left of the page through a pipe and is burnt to create a high temperature inside the boiler. To the right is the steam turbine. A pipe carries water from the bottom of the turbine enclosure to the left, into a heat exchanger in the boiler, where it is heated to create steam at high pressure. This travels to the right through a pipe to rotate the turbine blades at high speed. To the right, a generator, driven by the rotation of the turbine produces an alternating electric current, which is fed into the national electricity grid. To the right of the generator you can find a cooling tower. Hot water from a condenser in the turbine housing is pumped to water jets in the cooling tower and sprayed into a tank to cool. The cold water is then pumped back to the condenser in the turbine housing to condense the steam from the turbine.

Fossil fuel power station (UEB uncontracted)

by Rnib

This is a labelled cross section diagram of a fossil fuel power station, showing the process of producing electrical power from fossil fuels such coal, coke, gas and oil, and also wood and bio fuels (oils and gases from plant sources). There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the correct way up. The image is surrounded by a dashed line image border. The diagram is in four main sections. From left to right these are: the boiler, the steam turbine, the generator and the cooling tower. The fuel comes into the boiler on the left of the page through a pipe and is burnt to create a high temperature inside the boiler. To the right is the steam turbine. A pipe carries water from the bottom of the turbine enclosure to the left, into a heat exchanger in the boiler, where it is heated to create steam at high pressure. This travels to the right through a pipe to rotate the turbine blades at high speed. To the right, a generator, driven by the rotation of the turbine produces an alternating electric current, which is fed into the national electricity grid. To the right of the generator you can find a cooling tower. Hot water from a condenser in the turbine housing is pumped to water jets in the cooling tower and sprayed into a tank to cool. The cold water is then pumped back to the condenser in the turbine housing to condense the steam from the turbine.

Three Types of River Delta - Fan, Bird's Foot and Tooth (UEB uncontracted)

by Rnib

This page shows three maps of river delta. Each image is surrounded by an image border. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the correct way up. The image in the top of the page is of an arcuate delta. The river Nile goes up the page from the bottom centre of the image. It branches into many distributaries in a fan like shape, the delta getting wider towards the sea. The Mediterranean coastline goes from left to right across the page. Part of the Mediterranean Sea fills the top half of the image. The characteristics of arcuate deltas are lots of short distributaries which fan out as they go downstream. The image in the middle of the page is a bird's foot delta. The Mississippi River goes from the top left of the image down and right making a peninsular sticking out into the Gulf of Mexico. In the centre of the image it branches into a few main distributaries. Each distributary lays a finger of silt in the sea so that the delta resembles a bird's foot. The image in the bottom of the page is of a cuspate delta. The Tiber River goes from the top right, meandering towards the bottom centre of the image. It has very few distributaries and an even spread of deposition making a shape similar to a tooth. The Italian coast goes from near the bottom right towards the top left of the image. The Tyrrhenian Sea fills the left half of the image.

Three Types of River Delta - Fan, Bird's Foot and Tooth (UEB contracted)

by Rnib

This page shows three maps of river delta. Each image is surrounded by an image border. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the correct way up. The image in the top of the page is of an arcuate delta. The river Nile goes up the page from the bottom centre of the image. It branches into many distributaries in a fan like shape, the delta getting wider towards the sea. The Mediterranean coastline goes from left to right across the page. Part of the Mediterranean Sea fills the top half of the image. The characteristics of arcuate deltas are lots of short distributaries which fan out as they go downstream. The image in the middle of the page is a bird's foot delta. The Mississippi River goes from the top left of the image down and right making a peninsular sticking out into the Gulf of Mexico. In the centre of the image it branches into a few main distributaries. Each distributary lays a finger of silt in the sea so that the delta resembles a bird's foot. The image in the bottom of the page is of a cuspate delta. The Tiber River goes from the top right, meandering towards the bottom centre of the image. It has very few distributaries and an even spread of deposition making a shape similar to a tooth. The Italian coast goes from near the bottom right towards the top left of the image. The Tyrrhenian Sea fills the left half of the image.

Three Types of River Delta - Fan, Bird's Foot and Tooth (large print)

by Rnib

This page shows three maps of river delta. Each image is surrounded by an image border. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left of the page when the image is the correct way up. The image in the top of the page is of an arcuate delta. The river Nile goes up the page from the bottom centre of the image. It branches into many distributaries in a fan like shape, the delta getting wider towards the sea. The Mediterranean coastline goes from left to right across the page. Part of the Mediterranean Sea fills the top half of the image. The characteristics of arcuate deltas are lots of short distributaries which fan out as they go downstream. The image in the middle of the page is a bird's foot delta. The Mississippi River goes from the top left of the image down and right making a peninsular sticking out into the Gulf of Mexico. In the centre of the image it branches into a few main distributaries. Each distributary lays a finger of silt in the sea so that the delta resembles a bird's foot. The image in the bottom of the page is of a cuspate delta. The Tiber River goes from the top right, meandering towards the bottom centre of the image. It has very few distributaries and an even spread of deposition making a shape similar to a tooth. The Italian coast goes from near the bottom right towards the top left of the image. The Tyrrhenian Sea fills the left half of the image.

Air Masses that Affect Weather in the UK (tactile)

by Rnib

This is a tactile diagram for GCSE level students. The map of the UK is shown, with arrows indicating the direction of various air masses towards the UK. The UK is textured.

Amazon Rainforest Climate Graph (tactile)

by Rnib

This is a tactile diagram for GCSE level students. A bar graph shows level of rainfall and temperature throughout the year. The axis are all labelled, and users can follow the graph using the textured bars and plotted line.

ANC Flag (UEB contracted)

by Rnib

This page shows an image of the ANC (African National Congress) flag. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left when the image is the correct way up. The background to the flag is three broad horizontal stripes. The top one is black, the middle is green and the bottom stripe is yellow. The centre of the flag has a motif comprising four symbolic shapes. The capital letters ANC are shown in black in the bottom right of the image. Up from these letters is a diagrammatic cogwheel with eight thick white spokes and a white rim. The rest of the wheel is black. Up from the wheel is a small version of the flag shown with slight curves as though flying in a breeze. It does not have the four symbolic shapes. Going from the top of the image to the bottom just to the left of the ANC letters is a traditional spear with the spear point at the top. It is grasped by a fist coloured white. Only the fingers and thumb are shown. Behind the spear and fist is a traditional oval shield. There are some horizontal white decorative lines in the top left of the shield. The shield has a black background. The small flag covers the top right of the shield. The African National Congress is a political party holding a majority in the South African government.

ANC Flag (large print)

by Rnib

This page shows an image of the ANC (African National Congress) flag. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left when the image is the correct way up. The background to the flag is three broad horizontal stripes. The top one is black, the middle is green and the bottom stripe is yellow. The centre of the flag has a motif comprising four symbolic shapes. The capital letters ANC are shown in black in the bottom right of the image. Up from these letters is a diagrammatic cogwheel with eight thick white spokes and a white rim. The rest of the wheel is black. Up from the wheel is a small version of the flag shown with slight curves as though flying in a breeze. It does not have the four symbolic shapes. Going from the top of the image to the bottom just to the left of the ANC letters is a traditional spear with the spear point at the top. It is grasped by a fist coloured white. Only the fingers and thumb are shown. Behind the spear and fist is a traditional oval shield. There are some horizontal white decorative lines in the top left of the shield. The shield has a black background. The small flag covers the top right of the shield. The African National Congress is a political party holding a majority in the South African government.

ANC Flag (UEB uncontracted)

by Rnib

This page shows an image of the ANC (African National Congress) flag. There is a locator dot shown, which will be at the top left when the image is the correct way up. The background to the flag is three broad horizontal stripes. The top one is black, the middle is green and the bottom stripe is yellow. The centre of the flag has a motif comprising four symbolic shapes. The capital letters ANC are shown in black in the bottom right of the image. Up from these letters is a diagrammatic cogwheel with eight thick white spokes and a white rim. The rest of the wheel is black. Up from the wheel is a small version of the flag shown with slight curves as though flying in a breeze. It does not have the four symbolic shapes. Going from the top of the image to the bottom just to the left of the ANC letters is a traditional spear with the spear point at the top. It is grasped by a fist coloured white. Only the fingers and thumb are shown. Behind the spear and fist is a traditional oval shield. There are some horizontal white decorative lines in the top left of the shield. The shield has a black background. The small flag covers the top right of the shield. The African National Congress is a political party holding a majority in the South African government.

Asylum Seekers (UEB uncontracted)

by Rnib

These pages show bar graphs relating to asylum seekers. It is a multi-page image set on two pages. There is a locator dot shown on each page, which will be at the top left, when the image is the correct way up. Asylum seekers allowed to stay in the UK: The X-axis at the bottom of the page shows time in years and is labelled every two years. The Y-axis is on the left of the page and shows the numbers of asylum seekers in thousands. It is labelled every two thousand people. The bars are vertical, starting and ending low with a high peak in 2003. The exact number of people is labelled at the top of each bar. Proportion of UK population with a degree or higher qualification: The X-axis at the bottom of the page shows the percentage of the population, marked every ten and labelled every twenty percentage points. The bars are horizontal and labelled at the end of each bar.

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