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Pelorosaurus teethThese robust chopping teeth from Pelorosaurus, a sauropod, show where the outer enamel has been worn away by constant chopping at plants. This dinosaur lived 130 to 112 million years ago
Dinosaur egg excavation, 1925George Olsen showing his find of dinosaur eggs to Roy Chapman Andrews during the 1925 expedition to Mongolia by the American Museum of Natural History
Du cours de l OrenoquePlate 16 from Atlas Geographique et Physique du Nouveau Continent (1814) by Al. de Humboldt
Dinosaur skeletons comparing hip pelvic structureThe pelvis consists of three bones on each side. Top, a Saurischian dinosaur. Middle, an early Ornithischian dinosaur. Bottom, a Later Ornithischian dinosaur
The Central Hall of the Waterhouse BuildingThe Waterhouse Buiding at the Natural History Museum, London was designed by Alfred Waterhouse (1830-1905) and first opened its doors on Easter Monday 1881
MicroraptorIllustration of a Microraptor by Jo Konopelko, Natural History Museum Design Studio
Diplodocus carnegiei, diplodocusView of the Natural History Museums diplodocus cast in the Central Hall of the museum
Diplodocus skeletonWeighing around 20 tonnes & reaching up to 26 metres in length Diplodocus is one of the worlds longest dinosaurs to have been discovered. It was first described by Marsh in 1878
Side view of a Baryonyx snoutBaryonyx was a carnivorous dinosaur that lived during the Lower Cretaceous period around 125 million years ago. Photographed by Phil Crabb
GallimimusOutline illustration of a Gallimimus
Deinonychus skeletonA fast moving pretador that lived duirng the Lower Cretaceous period, 120 to 110 million years ago. Fossils have been found in the USA, being first described by Ostrom, 1969
Dinosaur coprolitesFossilised faecal droppings of a dinosaur (probably Titanosaurus) with plant debris on the surface. From the Upper Cretaceous of India