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Dugong Collection

Background imageDugong Collection: West Indian manatee, Trichechus manatus

West Indian manatee, Trichechus manatus, and dugong, Dugong dugon. Handcoloured copperplate engraving from Rene Primevere Lessons Complements de Buffon, Pourrat Freres, Paris, 1838

Background imageDugong Collection: THE MYSTERIOUS ISLAND Top saved from the dugong Date: 1874

THE MYSTERIOUS ISLAND Top saved from the dugong Date: 1874

Background imageDugong Collection: Narwhal and dugong (vulnerable)

Narwhal and dugong (vulnerable)
Narwhal, Monodon monoceros, and dugong, Dugong dugon (vulnerable). Lithograph by Karl Joseph Brodtmann from Heinrich Rudolf Schinzs Illustrated Natural History of Men and Animals, 1836

Background imageDugong Collection: Dugong, Dugong dugon

Dugong, Dugong dugon (Dugong of the East Indies, Dugungus indicus). Handcoloured steel engraving by W.H. Lizars after an illustration by James Stewart from Robert Hamiltons Amphibious Carnivora

Background imageDugong Collection: Dugong and Amazonian manatee

Dugong and Amazonian manatee
Dugong, Dugong dugon, vulnerable 1 and Amazonian manatee, Trichechus inunguis, vulnerable 2. Handcoloured copperplate engraving from Friedrich Johann Bertuchs Bilderbuch fur Kinder

Background imageDugong Collection: Dugong, Dugong dugon (vulnerable) and Amazon

Dugong, Dugong dugon (vulnerable) and Amazon river dolphin, Inia geoffrensis.. Handcolored copperplate stipple engraving from Frederic Cuviers Dictionary of Natural Science: Mammals, Paris, France

Background imageDugong Collection: Encyclopaedia of Sport - Tickling the Dugong

Encyclopaedia of Sport - Tickling the Dugong
VII. Tickling for Dugong on the plains of Oudh. Another unusual and fanciful sport from the imagination of William Heath Robinson. Date: 1914

Background imageDugong Collection: Dugong dugon, dugong

Dugong dugon, dugong
A dugong exhibit at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageDugong Collection: Dugong casting, c. 1924, the Natural History Museum, London

Dugong casting, c. 1924, the Natural History Museum, London
To avoid the results of deterioration, it was vital to prepare casts from the bodies of large cetaceans and other mammals, such as this rare dugong, as soon as they arrived at the Museum


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