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Fossil Collection (page 23)

Background imageFossil Collection: Bee in Dominican amber

Bee in Dominican amber
A bee, Hymenoptera: Aculeata: Apidae trapped in Dominican amber. This specimen was used to attempt DNA extraction

Background imageFossil Collection: Dominican amber

Dominican amber containing a cockroach and two termites dating from the Lower Miocene about 20 million years old. Donated by Cobra and Bellamy

Background imageFossil Collection: Caterpillar skin in Dominican amber

Caterpillar skin in Dominican amber
A shed caterpillar skin Lepidoptera, in Dominican amber. Specimen dates from the Lower Miocene. Page 66 Fig. 66 from Amber the Natural Time Capsule

Background imageFossil Collection: Edwardian necklace

Edwardian necklace
A necklace containing fake amber beads. Included are celluloid, phenolic resin, casein and glass beads. Fig. 11 from Amber The Natural Time Capsule

Background imageFossil Collection: Quercus bract in baltic amber

Quercus bract in baltic amber
A bract from the male flower of an oak tree in Baltic amber. Specimen dates from the Upper Eocene

Background imageFossil Collection: Baltic amber

Baltic amber

Background imageFossil Collection: Social wasp in amber

Social wasp in amber
A social wasp preserved in Dominican amber. Specimen dates from the Lower Miocene. Donated by Cobra and Bellamy

Background imageFossil Collection: Homo habilis cranium (OH24) (reconstruction)

Homo habilis cranium (OH24) (reconstruction)
Cast of a reconstructed cranium from Bed 1, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. Olduvai Hominid 24, known as Twiggy (OH 24). Discovered by Paul Nzube in 1968

Background imageFossil Collection: Isle of Wight amber

Isle of Wight amber
Spider in Isle of Wight amber. Lower Cretaceous about 130 million years old. Borrowed from Museum of Isle of Wight Geology

Background imageFossil Collection: Moth preserved in Baltic amber

Moth preserved in Baltic amber
A moth preserved in Baltic amber dating from the Upper Eocene period, about 40 million years old

Background imageFossil Collection: Homo sapiens (Goughs Cave 3) cranium

Homo sapiens (Goughs Cave 3) cranium
Modern human childs skull with cut marks excavated from Goughs Cave, Cheddar, Somerset. Dated at around 14, 000 to 12, 000 years old, late upper palaeolilthic (Creswellian)

Background imageFossil Collection: Barkham Manor drive, Piltdown

Barkham Manor drive, Piltdown
View looking down Barkham Manor drive, c. 1930, with Woodward in the foreground. This photograph is believed to have been taken by Lady Woodward or her daughter Mrs Margaret Hodgson

Background imageFossil Collection: Homo heidelbergensis (Broken Hill) & Homo erectus pelvis (

Homo heidelbergensis (Broken Hill) & Homo erectus pelvis (
Side view comparison of pelvis (ischium) of a male Homo heidelbergensis, (Broken Hill E719) and a cast of Homo erectus Pelvis (OH28) discovered at Olduvai Gorge

Background imageFossil Collection: Piltdown cricket bat

Piltdown cricket bat
Side view of sharpened piece of elephant thighbone, presented as a digging implement. Commonly referred to as the Piltdown cricket bat. Held at The Natural History Museum, London

Background imageFossil Collection: Barkham Manor, Piltdown

Barkham Manor, Piltdown
The Barkham Manor Piltdown I site, c. 1912, from vantage point due east of the manor house

Background imageFossil Collection: Senftenbergia sp

Senftenbergia sp
Fossil fern fronds from Britain, is 320-290 million years old from the Late Carboniferous. On display in the From the Beginning, Gallery 63, Earth Galleries at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageFossil Collection: Preliminary flourine test of the Piltdown remains in 1949

Preliminary flourine test of the Piltdown remains in 1949
Dr Kenneth Oakley discussing with Mr L. E. Parsons (right) where the mandible of Piltdown man could be sampled with the least risk of damage

Background imageFossil Collection: Homo sapiens cranium (Skhul 5)

Homo sapiens cranium (Skhul 5)
Frontal view of a reconstructed cast skull belonging to a male, 30-40 years old Homo sapiens, discovered at Mugharet Es-Skhul, Cave in the Wadi el-Mughara, Mt Carmel, Israel, by T.D

Background imageFossil Collection: Poems by Mary Anning (1799-1871)

Poems by Mary Anning (1799-1871)
Encomium Murchisonaum, a poem written c. 1840 s. Page 3 of 3. The Complaint of a sunbeam against Dr Faraday, written in honour of the English physicist and chemist Michael Faraday (1791-1867)

Background imageFossil Collection: Dictyonema retiforme, grapolite

Dictyonema retiforme, grapolite
Fossil grapolite from the Early Silurian (425 million years old), Ontario, Canada. On display in the From the Beginning, Gallery 63, Earth Galleries at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageFossil Collection: Piltdown 1 jaw with Piltdown 2 molar

Piltdown 1 jaw with Piltdown 2 molar

Background imageFossil Collection: Todites denticulatus

Todites denticulatus
Jurassic fossil leaf from York, England. Specimen held at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageFossil Collection: Homo sapiens (Ckn. UC. 101) cranium (Zhoukoudian)

Homo sapiens (Ckn. UC. 101) cranium (Zhoukoudian)
Facial view of a cast of a skull belonging to Homo sapiens male. Original specimen was discovered in Upper Cave (Shandingdong), South West of Peking, China. Thought to be around 24, 000 years old

Background imageFossil Collection: Conodonts, tooth like fossils

Conodonts, tooth like fossils
These microscopic tooth like fossils are from the Ordovician period of the Ludlow area, Shropshire, UK about 420m yrs old (Magnification x 3.8)

Background imageFossil Collection: Homo sapiens cranium (Florisbad 1)

Homo sapiens cranium (Florisbad 1)
Lateral and frontal view of a cast of a Homo sapiens skull from Florisbad, South Africa. Upper Pleistocene 130, 000-12, 000 BP. Reconstructed by P. Cohen

Background imageFossil Collection: Studying a fossil specimen

Studying a fossil specimen
A visitor at the Natural History Museum, London handling a fossil specimen

Background imageFossil Collection: Page of Hans Sloanes catalogue of Fossils

Page of Hans Sloanes catalogue of Fossils
No. 1185 - 1189 written entry from a page of Hans Sloanes catalogue of Fossils Vol. 5, Fishes, Birds, Quadrupeds, 1742

Background imageFossil Collection: Homo sapiens (Goughs Cave 49) mandible

Homo sapiens (Goughs Cave 49) mandible
Adolescent modern human mandible found during excavations in Goughs Cave, Cheddar, Somerset, dates back to around 14, 000 - 12, 000 year ago, (Creswellian)

Background imageFossil Collection: Pycnodus zeaformis Longbottom, fish tooth plate

Pycnodus zeaformis Longbottom, fish tooth plate
Corn-on-the-cob fish tooth plate from a paratype specimen dating from the Lower or Middle Eocene phosphates; Tamagu?lelt, Gao region, Mali

Background imageFossil Collection: Hepaticites arcuatus

Hepaticites arcuatus
Fossil from the Natural History Museum s, Palaeontology Department

Background imageFossil Collection: Streptelasma, coral

Streptelasma, coral
A horn coral, the solitary rugosan Streptelasma from the Ordovician of the USA, measuring almost 4 cm in length

Background imageFossil Collection: Actinostroma, a dome-shaped stromatoporoid

Actinostroma, a dome-shaped stromatoporoid
Vertical polished section through the dome-shaped stromatoporoid Actinostroma, 9 cm in width, from Devonian rocks of Western Australia

Background imageFossil Collection: Terebratula, a fossil brachiopod

Terebratula, a fossil brachiopod
The pedicle opening is very clear in this British Pliocene example of Terebratula measuing 6.6 cm in height

Background imageFossil Collection: Jew Stones or sea urchin spines

Jew Stones or sea urchin spines
Unidentified specimens of sea urchin spines possibly from Balanocidaris glandaria Leske, a Cretaceous echinoid found in Palestine

Background imageFossil Collection: Halysites, chain coral

Halysites, chain coral
Part of a colony of the tabulate chain coral Halysites from the Silurian of Gotland, Sweden. The visible width of this specimen is 7 cm

Background imageFossil Collection: Hildoceras bifrons, snakestone ammonite

Hildoceras bifrons, snakestone ammonite
A snakestone ammonite (Hildoceras bifrons) from the Jurassic Lias rocks of Yorkshire, U.K

Background imageFossil Collection: Hylomous lyelli

Hylomous lyelli
Fossil from the Natural History Museum s, Palaeontology Department

Background imageFossil Collection: Native necklace of fossil foraminifera (Alveolinae)

Native necklace of fossil foraminifera (Alveolinae)
Native necklace of fossil foraminifera from John Whittakers cabinet, fossils dating from the Eocene Limestone, Sindh, India

Background imageFossil Collection: Pronorites cyclolobus, ammonoid

Pronorites cyclolobus, ammonoid
An extinct, marine fossil invertebrate from the class Cephalopoda belonging in the phylum Mollusca (molluscs). Photographed by Beatriz Aguirre-Urreta

Background imageFossil Collection: Phragmoceras sp. nautiloid

Phragmoceras sp. nautiloid
An extinct marine fossil invertebrate from the class Cephalopoda belonging in the phylum Mollusca (molluscs). Photographed by Beatriz Aguirre-Urreta

Background imageFossil Collection: Sepia craveri, fossil cuttlefish

Sepia craveri, fossil cuttlefish
An extinct marine fossil invertebrate, a relative to todays cuttlefish from the class Cephalopoda belonging in the phylum Mollusca (molluscs). Photographed by Beatriz Aguirre-Urreta

Background imageFossil Collection: Butterfly stone Hu-die-shih trilobites

Butterfly stone Hu-die-shih trilobites
Trilobite Drepanura; inferred Upper Cambrian, Shantung Province, China. Mounted slab from Keeper?s Meeting Room

Background imageFossil Collection: Hemicyclaspis murchisoni and Thyestes egertoni, fossil fishe

Hemicyclaspis murchisoni and Thyestes egertoni, fossil fishe
Fossil fishes from the Devonian Period, found in Ledbury, Herefordshire. Specimens are on display at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageFossil Collection: Hydnoceras, a hexactinellid sponge

Hydnoceras, a hexactinellid sponge
Over 17 cm tall, this natural cast of the hexactinellid sponge Hydnoceras comes from Devonian rocks of New York State

Background imageFossil Collection: Cyclomedusa

Cyclomedusa from the latest Precambrian (Ediacaran) of South Australia. The slab of sandstone bearing this apparent jellyfish has a visible width of about 8cms



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