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Dinosaurs of the Upper Cretaceous Period - Alberta, CanadaDinosaurs of the Upper Cretaceous Period (which began 100.5 million years ago, and ended 66 million years ago) found in the region of Alberta, Canada. Date: circa 90 Million Years BC
Dragonet Date: 1806
Synodontis maculipinna, catfishSynodontis is the most widely-distributed mochokid genus. This specimen was collected from the Rufigi River near Lake Tanganyika in Tanzania and arrived at the museum in 1922
Echidna nebulosa, clouded eelFf. 172. Watercolour painting by George Forster annotated echidna variegata murona and made during Captain James Cooks second voyage to explore the southern continent (1772-75)
Galaxias argenteus, giant kokopuFf. 235. Watercolour painting by George Forster made during Captain James Cooks second voyage to explore the southern continent (1772-75)
Lutjanus fulvus, blacktail snapperFf. 213. Pencil sketch by George Forster made during Captain James Cooks second voyage to explore the southern continent (1772-75)
Tolypeutes tricinctus, Brazilian three-banded armadilloSpecimen from The Natural History Museum, London
Lepidotes sp. wealden fishFosillised scales and teeth of the wealden fish (Lepidotes) found inside the ribs of the dinosaur Baryonyx walkeri, Surrey
Village elder, Ceylon (Sri Lanka). Date: circa 1890s
Pholiodophorus bechei, fossil fishA bony fish specimen preserved in the Jurassic rocks near Lyme Regis, Dorset
Lycoptera, bony fish fossilFossil of a bony fish found in jurassic China, 206-142 million years ago
Lates gracilis, bony fishSpecimen of an Eocene bony fish (lates gracilis)
Glyptodon clavipes, giant armadilloExtinct herbivore that died out about 10, 000 years ago on display in the Central Hall at The Natural History Museum, London. The Glyptodon was named by Sir Richard Owen in 1839
Zaedyus pichiy, pichi armadilloPichi armadillo collected by Charles Darwin at Bahia Blanca, Argentina, 1833 (formerly Daspus minutus)