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Homo Collection (page 3)

Background imageHomo Collection: Australopithecus boisei (OH5) & Homo habilis (OH24) crania

Australopithecus boisei (OH5) & Homo habilis (OH24) crania
Two cranium casts of: (left) Australopithecus boisei known as OH5 and (right) homo habilis known as OH24. Both original specimens were discovered within Bed 1 at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania

Background imageHomo Collection: Homo habilis tools

Homo habilis tools
A collection of pebble tools (Oldowan) discovered at the Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. They date back to about 1.8 million years ago

Background imageHomo Collection: RIBERA, Jos頨1588-1652). Ecce homo. Painting

RIBERA, Jos頨1588-1652). Ecce homo. Painting
RIBERA, Jos頨 1588-1652). Ecce homo. Painting on copper. Attributed. Baroque art. Oil. SPAIN. Cᤩ z. Museo de Cᤩ z

Background imageHomo Collection: Ecce Homo

Ecce Homo
Tiziano Vecello, also called Titian (1490-1576). Ecce Homo. Jesus Christ presented scourged and bound. Renaissance art. Cinquecento. Oil on canvas

Background imageHomo Collection: Skeleton of Man. Skhull Cave (Me arat Hagedi). Middle Paleol

Skeleton of Man. Skhull Cave (Me arat Hagedi). Middle Paleolithic period. Ca. 100, 000 years before the present. 40-50 years old of the arcahic Homo Sapiens Sapiens

Background imageHomo Collection: Ecce Homo Arch, Jerusalem, circa 1880s

Ecce Homo Arch, Jerusalem, circa 1880s. Date: circa 1880s

Background imageHomo Collection: Ecce Homo Arch on the Via Dolorosa, Jesusalem, circa 1880s

Ecce Homo Arch on the Via Dolorosa, Jesusalem, circa 1880s (Zangaki studio). Date: circa 1880s

Background imageHomo Collection: Israel. Jerusalem. Church of Ecce Homo. Interior

Israel. Jerusalem. Church of Ecce Homo. Interior
Israel. Jerusalem. Via Dolorosa. Church of Ecce Homo. Roman Catholic Church, part of the Convent of the Sisters of Zion. Interior. Old City

Background imageHomo Collection: Portrait of Sallust (86-35 BC). Colored engraving, 1772

Portrait of Sallust (86-35 BC). Colored engraving, 1772
Sallust (Gaius Sallustius Crispus) (86-35 BC). Roman politician and historian. Colored engraving. 1772

Background imageHomo Collection: Hand axes of quartzite. Petite Lande, France. Mousterian Cul

Hand axes of quartzite. Petite Lande, France. Mousterian Culture. 100000-40000 BC. National Museum of Denmark. Copenhagen. Denmark

Background imageHomo Collection: Hand axes of flint. Aisne Valley, France. Mousterian Culture

Hand axes of flint. Aisne Valley, France. Mousterian Culture. 100000-40000 BC. National Museum of Denmark. Copenhagen. Denmark

Background imageHomo Collection: Sallust (86-35 BC). Jugurthine War. Engraving

Sallust (86-35 BC). Jugurthine War. Engraving
Sallust (Gaius Sallustius Crispus) (86-35 BC). Roman politician and historian. Jugurthine War (111-104 BC). Engraving depicting the battle between the army of Jugurtha

Background imageHomo Collection: Skull of Homo sapiens

Skull of Homo sapiens. Natural History Museum. London. United Kingdom

Background imageHomo Collection: Skull probably from Homo sapiens

Skull probably from Homo sapiens. From Laetoli. Tanzania. Natural History Museum. London. United Kingdom

Background imageHomo Collection: Luis de Morales, the Divine (c. 1510-1586). Ecce Homo

Luis de Morales, the Divine (c. 1510-1586). Ecce Homo
Renaissance Art. Espana.16th century. Luis de Morales, the Divine (c. 1510-1586). Spanish painter. Ecce Homo. Cathedral Museum. Avila. Castile and Leon

Background imageHomo Collection: Ach of Ecce Homo, Jerusalem

Ach of Ecce Homo, Jerusalem
The Arch of Ecce Homo, outside the church, Jerusalem. Along the path that according to tradition Jesus walked, carrying his cross, on the way to his crucifixion

Background imageHomo Collection: Horse-head engraved on bone

Horse-head engraved on bone
Late Pleistocene wild horses head engraved on the right fourth metatarsal bone of a horse, specimen (NHM 38745). Found among horse remains from the Late Magdalenian site of Roc du Courbet, Bruniquel

Background imageHomo Collection: Homo heildelbergensis, Broken Hill Man

Homo heildelbergensis, Broken Hill Man
Broken Hill skull, Homo heidelbergensis, discovered in Africa in 1921. The skull belonged to an adult male and may be 200, 000 to 300, 000 years old

Background imageHomo Collection: Homo neanderthalensis (Ferrassie 1) cranium

Homo neanderthalensis (Ferrassie 1) cranium
Cranium and mandibula cast of an adult male Neandertal Man (Homo neanderthalensis) discovered at La Ferrassie, Dordogne, France, by D Peyrony and L. Captian in 1909

Background imageHomo Collection: Homo neanderthalensis (calpicus) cranium

Homo neanderthalensis (calpicus) cranium
First skull of an adult female Neanderthal, Homo neanderthalensis, about 50, 000 years old. Unearthed in 1848 in Gibraltar. Date: 1848

Background imageHomo Collection: Diluvian human skeleton known as Homo diluvii

Diluvian human skeleton known as Homo diluvii testis, and a human skeleton from Guadalupe.. Handcolored lithograph from Dr. F.A

Background imageHomo Collection: Ecce Homo Arch, Via Dolorosa, Jerusalem

Ecce Homo Arch, Via Dolorosa, Jerusalem
Ecce Homo Arch in the Via Dolorosa, Jerusalem. Date: 1920s

Background imageHomo Collection: Ecce Homo Arch, Jerusalem

Ecce Homo Arch, Jerusalem
Ecce Homo Arch, Via Dolorosa, Jerusalem, Holy Land. Date: circa 1870

Background imageHomo Collection: Fredk. Paludan-Muller

Fredk. Paludan-Muller
FREDERIK PALUDAN-MULLER Danish poet, author of Adam homo. Date: 1809 - 1876

Background imageHomo Collection: Ecce Homo

Ecce Homo. Unknown 17th century

Background imageHomo Collection: Caricature of Hungarian artist Mihaly Munkacsy by Phil May

Caricature of Hungarian artist Mihaly Munkacsy by Phil May
A rather harsh parody / caricature of the Hungarian artist Mihaly Munkacsy (1844-1900) and his famous religious painting of 1896 Ecce Homo! (" Behold the Man!" ) by Phil May. Date: 1898

Background imageHomo Collection: Homo habilis carniums casts from Olduvai Gorge and Koobi For

Homo habilis carniums casts from Olduvai Gorge and Koobi For
The white cranium is Homo habilis discovered at Koobi Fora, East Turkana, Kenya believed to have lived about 1.8 million years ago

Background imageHomo Collection: Skull cups and bone fragments, Goughs Cave

Skull cups and bone fragments, Goughs Cave
Skull cups identified among human remains from Goughs Cave, Somerset. At around 14, 700 years old, the skull cups are the oldest directly dated examples in the world

Background imageHomo Collection: Homo heidelbergensis mandible casts (Mauer 1 and Swartkrans)

Homo heidelbergensis mandible casts (Mauer 1 and Swartkrans)
The larger mandible is a cast from Homo heidelbergensis and was discovered by workmen at Mauer sand-pit, Germany in 1907. The smaller is of a mandible discovered in Swartkrans, South Africa

Background imageHomo Collection: Aurignacian tools

Aurignacian tools
A bone point, probably a spearhead and a flint end-scraper tool of Aurignacian age, 30, 000 - 34, 000 years old from France

Background imageHomo Collection: Skull cup found at Goughs Cave

Skull cup found at Goughs Cave
A skull cup identified among human remains from Goughs Cave, Somerset. At around 14, 700 years old, the skull cups are the oldest directly dated examples in the world

Background imageHomo Collection: Homo habilis cranium & mandible fragment casts

Homo habilis cranium & mandible fragment casts
Casts of fragments mandible and cranium fragments of a Homo habilis discovered at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania dating back to between 1.85 million years ago to 1.6 million years ago

Background imageHomo Collection: Homo sapiens cranium

Homo sapiens cranium
A cast of a human (Homo sapiens) cranium held at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageHomo Collection: Part of human perinatal skeleton

Part of human perinatal skeleton from Poundbury Cemetery (Romano-British, 2nd / 3rd century A.D.), Dorset

Background imageHomo Collection: Venus in limestone

Venus in limestone
Figure of a woman, or Venus, engraved in limestone, Gravettian age 22, 000 - 30, 000 years old (Upper Palaeolithic) from Abri Pataud in France. Created by Cro-Magnon man

Background imageHomo Collection: Hoxnian anters, bones & hand axe from Swanscombe

Hoxnian anters, bones & hand axe from Swanscombe
Part of a deer antler, fragment of elephant bone and flint hand axe all discovered at Swanscombe, Kent, south of the River Thames

Background imageHomo Collection: Romano-british human collar bone

Romano-british human collar bone
Anterior of medial end of right collar bone of a human skeleton from Radley in Oxfordshire. Age between 50 BC and 410 AD

Background imageHomo Collection: Homo heidelbergensis cranium (Petralona 1)

Homo heidelbergensis cranium (Petralona 1)
An adult male cranium (cast) discovered at the foot of Katsika Hill, Petralona, south east of Thessaloniki, Greece. The specimen dates back 400, 000 years. It was discovered by J

Background imageHomo Collection: Homo erectus cranium (OH9)

Homo erectus cranium (OH9)
The cranium (cast) of Homo erectus discovered at Bed II, site LLK at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania by Louis Leakey in 1960. This specimen is the Holotype of Homo leakeyi. This specimen dates back c

Background imageHomo Collection: Homo sapiens (Goughs Cave 190) cranium

Homo sapiens (Goughs Cave 190) cranium
Modern human skull showing cut marks excavated from Goughs Cave, Cheddar, Somerset dated at around 14, 000 to 12, 000 years old, late upper palaeolithic (Creswellian)

Background imageHomo Collection: Paragonimus sp. parasitic worm

Paragonimus sp. parasitic worm
Human lung fluke, a parasitic worm. Common in South East Asia, in 1980 there were thought to be 3 million people infected



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