mail_outline sales@mediastorehouse.com
Davallia canariensis (L. ) Sm. hares foot fernSketch 18, Newfoundland Volume. From a collection of original drawings and sketches by Georg Dionysius Ehret (1708-1770). Held in the Botany Library at the Natural History Museum, London
The Shadow DancePlate 17 taken from The Life and Habits of Wild Animals, illustrated with designs by Joseph Wolf, London 1874. Date: 1874
Lepus Cuniculus, RabbitPlate XVIII of a dissection of a Rabbit from Anatomy of Vertebrates by Daniel McAlpine, published in 1881
Boys sketching rabbit, 1949. The Natural History Museum, LoTo ensure the children actually learnt something during their visit, they had to research and produce a description of the animals they drew
Conilurus albipes, white-footed tree-ratNative name Gnar-ruck. Detail from drawing 81, possibly by Thomas Watling (1762 -c. 1814), from the Thomas Watling Drawings Collection, 1788-c. 1797, held at the Natural History Museum
Lepus europaeus, European brown hare and Mustela nivalis, leHare and Weasel. Plate from a collection of pencil sketches and watercolour drawings of British mammals c. 1890-1910 by Edward Adrian Wilson (1872-1912)
Ochotona curzoniae, black-lipped pikaPlate 119a from the collection of drawings of mammals and birds from Nepal, 1818-1858, by Bryan Houghton Hodgson (1800-1894)
Nesolagus netscheri, Sumatran rabbitPhotograph, viewed from above, of a Sumatran rabbit skin specimen from the collections of the Natural History Museum, London
Lagomys tibetanusPlate 48 from Recherches pour servir a l histoire naturelle des Mammifcres, Vols. 1-4, 1868-74, by Dr. Henri Milne-Edwards (1800-1885) & Dr. Alphonse Milne-Edwards (1835-1900)
Lepus europaeus, European brown harePlate 33 from British Mammals Vol. 1 & 2 by Archibald Thorburn, 1920-21
Detail of terracotta panel from the Natural History Museum
Hunted DownPlate 11 taken from The Life and Habits of Wild Animals, illustrated by designs by Joseph Wolf, London 1874
A Hair-Breadth EscapePlate 2 taken from The Life and Habits of Wild Animals, illustrated by designs by Joseph Wolf, London 1874
Lepus timideus, hare designPencil sketch for the terracotta decoration of the Natural History Museum, London by Alfred Waterhouse 1874-1879. Waterhouse designed the museum in the 1860s
Oryctolagus cuniculus, European rabbitPhotograph of the left side view of a European rabbit skull from the education collection at the Natural History Museum at Tring, part of the Natural History Museum, London
Sylvilagus palustris, marsh rabbitLepus Palustris (Bachman), Marsh rabbit. Plate 18 from The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America, Vol. 1, 1845, by John James Audubon (1785-1851) and John Bachman (1790-1874)
Sylvilagus aquaticus, swamp rabbitLepus Aquaticus (Bachman), Swamp Hare (Male). Plate 37 from The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America, Vol. 1, 1845, by John James Audubon (1785-1851) and John Bachman (1790-1874)
Lepus americanus, snowshoe hareLepus Americanus (Erxlebein), Northern Hare (Summer. Male and Female). Plate 11 from The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America, Vol
Lepus townsendii, white-tailed jack rabbitLepus Townsendii (Bachman), Townsends Rocky Mountain Hare (Male and Female). Plate 3 from The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America, Vol
Buteo swainsoni, Swainsons hawkPlate 372 from John James Audubons Birds of America, original double elephant folio (1835-38), hand-coloured aquatint. Engraved, printed and coloured by R. Havell (& Son), London