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Tolypeutes tricinctus, Brazilian three-banded armadilloSpecimen from The Natural History Museum, London
Phthiracarus sp. box mite or armadillo miteScanning electron microscope (SEM) image of a box mite, showing how the body has fused into one single segment
Dasypus novemcinctus, Nine-banded armadilloHand coloured lithograph by John James Audubon from The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America, 1848. Date: 1848
Tortoise and armadillo comparisonA really strange picture, reminds me of 1960s New York art
A group of mammals and birdsPlate 37, hand coloured engraving, from Thesaurus Volume 1, 1734, by Albertus Seba (1665-1736)
Otiorhynchus armadillo and O. salicicola, armadillo weevilA pair of armadillo weevils on a leaf. Weevils are characterised by elongated rostrums or snouts
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
Glyptodon claipes specimen on display in the Central Hall at the Natural History Museum, London. It was the most armoured of all the ice age mammals
Glyptodon, giant armadilloSkeleton of Glyptodon, meaning carved tooth. The Glyptodon was a mammal which lived between 2 million years ago to around 15, 000 years ago. See image number 1136 for model
Zaedyus pichiy, pichi armadilloPichi armadillo collected by Charles Darwin at Bahia Blanca, Argentina, 1833 (formerly Daspus minutus)