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Emu by Gambier BoltonEmu photogrpaph by Gambier Bolton, F Zs 354, held at The Natural History Museum at Tring
Dromaius novaehollandiae, emuDrawing No. 67, watercolour by George Raper (1792) from The Raper Collection
Emu and young, Dromaius novaehollandiaeEmu and young chicks, Dromaius novaehollandiae. Lithograph after an illustration by Louisa Anne Meredith from her book Tasmanian Friends and Foes, Feathered, Furred and Finned, Marcus Ward, London
Turqoise berry and Aristotelia peduncularisTurquoise berry, Drymophila cyanocarpa, and red, white & black, Aristotelia peduncularis. Moth butterfly, Liphyra brassolis
Endangered banded hare wallabies and extinctEndangered banded hare wallabies or munning, Lagostrophus fasciatus, and extinct Kangaroo Island emu or dwarf emu, Dromaius baudinianus
Emu, rheas and kangaroos at Tring ParkLive animals collected by Walter Rothschild in the grounds of Tring Park, with keeper Mr Marcham, 1890 Date: 1890
Emu eggFresh emu eggs are a dark turquoise colour, which fades over time if they are preserved
Emu and rheas at Tring ParkRheas from South America and Emus from Australia are examples of the flightless ratite birds kept by Walter Rothschild at Tring Park
Cassowary, Casuarius australis (Emu, Dromaius novaehollandiae?).. Handcolored copperplate zoological engraving from George Shaw and Frederick Nodders The Naturalists Miscellany, 1792
Southern cassowary, Casuarius casuarius VulnerableSouthern cassowary, Casuarius casuarius. Vulnerable.. Handcolored copperplate stipple engraving from Dumont de Sainte-Croixs Dictionary of Natural Science: Ornithology, Paris, France, 1816-1830
The plains of New South Wales, with characteristic animalsPlate 12 from Alfred Russel Wallaces The Geographical Distribution of Animals, (1876)
John Thomas Tunney (1871-1929)Photograph of the late J.T. Tunney from The Emu, Volume 38, 1954, Plate 39. Tunney was an ornithologist who in 1902-1903 collected specimens for Lord Rothschild