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Casts of Australopithecus boisei jaw bonesCasts of Upper jaw (left) of Australopithecus (Paranthropus) boisei from the Olduvai Gorge; lower jaw (right) of Australopithecus (Paranthropus) boisei from Peninj
Pithecia pithecia, white-faced sakiFox-tailed Monkey, Simia pithecia. Plate facing p. 169 of Museum Leverianum; specimens from the museum of the late Sir Ashton Lever, by George Shaw. Published by James Parkinson, proprietor, 1792-1796
Brachyteles sp. woolly spider monkeyBrachyteles frontatus. Hand coloured lithograph from a drawing by Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins (1807-1889)
Pithecia sp. saki and Pithecia leucocephala, white-headed sPithecia pogonias & head of Pithecia leucocephala. Hand coloured lithograph from a drawing by Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins (1807-1889)
Macaca thibetana, Pcre Davids macaque
The Anthropomorpha of LinnaeusAn illustration by Bontius (1658) of early impressions of the Orangutan. The picture was published in Thomas Huxleys Evidence as to Mans Place in Nature (1883)
Le Sajou Brun, MalePlate 30 (170) Le Sajou Brun, Male. From Histoire Naturelle des Mammifcres, avec des figures originales, Vol. 1, 1819-42, by Etienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire & Baron Georges L. C. Frederic D. Cuvier
Homo sapiens, human and Gorilla gorilla, western gorillaDrawing of a human skeleton and a gorilla skeleton. Published in Transactions of the Zoological Society of London Vol. 5, Part 1 by Richard Owen, 1866
Homo erectus cranium (Ngandong 12)The cranium (cast) of a young adult male discovered at Ngandong on the Solo River terrace near Randublatung, Java. It was excavated by C. ter Haar and team in 1931-33. This specimen dates back c
Cercopithecus mona, mona monkeyMounted skeleton of a mona monkey
Homo erectus, Java manA model of Homo erectus, known as Java man, based on fossil evidence found in archaeological sites along the Solo River, Indonesia. The fossils date back to around 500, 000 to 800, 000 years ago
Homo erectus, Peking manA model head of Homo erectus known as Peking man, based upon evidence discovered at Zhoukoudian Cave (Locality 1), China dating back 500, 000 years. This model was created by Maurice Wilson
Galago moholi, South African galagoMounted skeleton of Galago moholi, South African galago, monkey
Hylobates lar, gibbonSkeleton of a gibbon suspended from the ceiling of the Natural History Museum, Londons Central Hall as part of the Primate Gallery display
Pongo pygmaeus, orangutan and Gorilla gorilla, western goril
Colobus polykomos, king colobusMounted skeleton of a king colobus monkey
Bronze sculpture of Chimpanzee headBronze sulpture of Chimpanzee head in the Primate gallery at the Natural History Museum, London
Pongo pygmaeus, bornean orangutanA specimen of Pongo pygmaeus, bornean orangutan
Trachypithecus vetulus, purple-faced leaf monkeySemnopithcus vetulus, Purple-Faced Leaf Monkey. Plate from the Loten Collection (1754-57), a painting by Pieter Cornelius de Bevere (1722-c. 1781)
Homo neanderthalensis, Neandertal Man skeletonLife size model of a male Neandertal (Homo neanderthalensis) skeleton. This was created using a modified modern human skeleton and replicas of Neandertal fossil bones
Cebus capucinus, white-faced capuchinPlate 2 from Museum S.R.M. Adolphi Friderici, by Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778), c. 1754-1764
Homo neanderthalensis, Neanderthal Man skeletonLife size model of a male Neanderthal (Homo neanderthalensis) skeleton. This was created using a modified modern human skeleton and replicas of Neanderthal fossil bones
Homo erectus, Peking man cranium (reconstruction)Reconstruction of a female Homo erectus cranium based upon the remains from many individuals discovered at Zhoukoudian Cave (Locality 1), China dating back 500, 000 years
Mandrillus sphinx, mandrill
Detail of terracotta moulding of a monkeyPart of the intricate interior architecture found in the Natural History Museums Waterhouse building, designed by Alfred Waterhouse (1830-1905)
Pygathrix nemaeus nemaeus, red-shanked douc langurPortrait of a red-shanked douc langur, native to north and central Vietnam, east-central Cambodia and possibly in China. Photographed by Frank Greenaway
Colobus guereza, guerezaPhotographed by Frank Greenaway
Pan troglodytes, chimpanzee
Pongo pygmaeus, orang-outangThe muscles of the Pongo pygmaeus from Orang-Outang sive Homo Sylvestris: or, The Anatomy of a Pygmie Compared with That of a Monkey, an Ape, and a Man by Edward Tyson, 1699
A Tropical Bathing-PlacePlate 10 taken from The Life and Habits of Wild Animals, illustrated by designs by Joseph Wolf, London 1874
Leontopithecus rosalia, golden lion tamarinA portrait of a golden lion tamarin. Photographed by Frank Greenaway
Pan paniscus, pygmy chimpanzeePhotographed by Frank Greenaway
Sivapithecus indicusIllustration by Maurice Wilson of Sivapithecus indicus, thick coated enamelled apes from Turkey and Indo-Pakistan dating from 13 million years ago
Homo neanderthalensis, Neanderthal Man burial site (Teshik-TReconstruction of a Neanderthal (Homo neanderthalensis) burial site based on remains discovered at Teshik-Tash, Uzbekistan dating back 70, 000 years
Homo sapiens (Predmosti) & Homo neanderthalensis (La Ferrass
Paranthropus boisei (OH5)
Proconsul, Homo heildebergensis & Homo neanderthalensis cranL to R: Cranium of Proconsul, an extinct primate that lived 18 million years ago; Homo heildebergensis (Broken Hill 1) discovered in Zambia; and Homo neanderthalensis (Gibraltar 1)
Gorilla gorilla, gorilla
Paranthropus sp. (left) and Homo erectus (right)Illustration by Maurice Wilson. 2 to 1.5 million years ago parts of Africa were populated by these two hominids. Paranthropus foraged peacefully but here is threatened by Homo erectus
Interior detail from the Natural History Museum, LondonThe Natural History Museum was designed by Alfred Waterhouse (1830-1905) and opened to the public on Easter Monday 1881
Homo neanderthalensis, Neanderthal Man cranium (NeanderthalCranium (cast) of Neanderthal 1, the original Neanderthal man discovered by workmen in 1856 in a cave at Neander Valley near Hochdahl, East of Dusseldorf, Germany
MonkeyPlate 72 of the John Reeves Collection of Zoological Drawings from Canton, China, 1774-1856
Pongo sp. Mandible and molar (Piltdown 1 & 2)Lateral lingual view of Piltdown 1 mandible with Piltdown 2 left molar. Held at The Natural History Museum, London
Pongo sp. Mandible with canine (Piltdown 1)Left lateral view of the Piltdown mandible reported to be that of a newly found homind species in 1913 but then revealed as a forgery in 1953. Specimen held at The Natural History Museum, London
Bronze bust of a chimpanzee