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Tooth from Coelodonta antiquitatis, woolly rhinocerosThis woolly rhino tooth, together with two others were found in 1668 at Chartham, near Canterbury in Kent by natural historian John Somner
Ceratotherium simum, white rhinocerosWhite rhinoceros. Sketch 121 from a collection of original sketches by Thomas Baines, (1859-1871)
Elephant skullsIncluding Elasmotherium sibircum (giant rhinoceros). Illustration from Recherches sur les ossements fossiles de quadrupcdes, by Georges Cuvier, first published in 1812
Rhinoceros unicornis, Indian RhinocerosIllustration from the Brian Houghton Hodgson Collection, c.1850 Date: circa 1850
Rhinoceros sondaicus, javan rhinoceros skull from sunderabund, Bengal
Elephas maximus, Asian elephant & rhinocerosPlate 221 from Capter 11 of Gleanings of Natural History by George Edwards (1694-1773), published 1758-1764
Interglacial LandscapeArtists impression of England during a Pleistocene (1.8 million to 11, 000 years before present) interglacial period. Rhinoceros feed on the sparse vegetation in the distance
Upper premolar of Stephanorhinus hundsheimensisUpper premolar of an exinct rhino found during the Boxgrove excavation. Boxgrove is a Middle Pleistocene site in West Sussex, England
Coelodonta antiquitatis, woolly rhinocerosFossil horn specimen from the extinct woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis)
Gyrostigma rhinocerontis, rhinoceros stomach botflyA rhinoceros stomach botfly, collected from Natal collected in October 1995
Rhinocerotidae, rhinocerosMounted specimen of a rhinoceros on display in the Mammals Gallery within the Life Gallleries at the Natural Hisotry Museum, London
Large mammal exhibition at The Natural History Museum at TriFormer exhibition at the Natural History Museum at Tring. Photographed by Colin Keates
Jaw of Stephanorhinus hemitoechus, the narrow-nosed rhinocerLower jaw of a narrow-nosed rhinoceros, Stephanorhinus hemitoechus dating back to the Pleistocene, 1.8 million years to 10, 000 years ago. This specimen was unearthed in Ilford, Essex, England
Pleistocene Britain, Swanscombe waterholeDiorama of Pleistocene (1.8 million to 11, 000 years ago) waterhole in Swanscombe, Kent, Britain, with elephant, fallow deer, rhinoceros, bear, bison, and man living in open grassland. See image 405
Rhinoceros sp. rhinocerosPainting, oil on canvas, by James Parsons (1705-1770), 1739. Original held at the Natural History Museum, London
Woolly rhinoceros skull
Panthera onca, jaguar and Tapirus indicus, Asian tapirFelis onca. Plate from A Monograph of the Felidae, or Family of the Cats, 1833, by Daniel Giraud Elliot. Illustrated with 43 hand-coloured lithographs from watercolour drawings by Joseph Wolf
Diceros bicornis, black rhinocerosBlack Rhinoceros (Blue Variety). Young cow, shot by Mr Hartley and Molony. September 1870. Sketch 112 from a collection of original sketches by Thomas Baines
Buceros rhinoceros, rhinoceros hornbill skullBack view of a skull of the rhinoceros hornbill (Buceros rhinoceros), from the Sloane collection
Gyrostigma rhinocerontis, botfly maggotA adult rhino botfly maggot (Gyrostigma rhinocerontis) extracted from a white rhino, Merseyside. Photographed by Martin Hall
Rhinocerotidae (family), rhinocerosWoodcut engraving published on page 953 of of Historiae Animalium, Vol. 1 De Quadrupedibus Viviparis (Viviparous Quadrupeds), 1555-1558, by Konrad Gesner (1516-1565)
Diceros bicornis, horn of a black rhinocerosA photograph of a black rhinoceros horn specimen from the collections of the Natural History Museum, London
Synthliboramphus antiquus, Aethia cristatella, A. pusilla, CPlate 402 from John James Audubons Birds of America, original double elephant folio (1835-38), hand-coloured aquatint. Engraved, printed and coloured by R. Havell (& Son), London
Pleistocene hunters, wider viewPleistocene (1.8 million years ago - 11, 000 years ago) hunting party with mammoths and rhinoceros