Skip to main content

Mammalia Collection (page 28)

Background imageMammalia Collection: Canis lupus familiaris, dog

Canis lupus familiaris, dog
Ballyregan Bob, famous racing greyhound. Specimen on display at the Natural History Museum at Tring, part of the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageMammalia Collection: Tring Gallery 3

Tring Gallery 3
Specimens on display at the Natural History Museum at Tring, part of the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageMammalia Collection: Leptonychotes weddellii, Weddell seal

Leptonychotes weddellii, Weddell seal
Mother Weddell seal with pup. Folio 1906. Ref. Z88fw. Watercolour by Edward Adrian Wilson (1872-1912) from reports of the Discovery Expedition to Antarctica, 1901-1904. Folio 1906. Ref. Z88fw

Background imageMammalia Collection: Rosa canina, dog rose

Rosa canina, dog rose
Watercolour no.4 by Ralph Stennett, 1807. Held in the Botany Library at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageMammalia Collection: Treatment of ear myiasis

Treatment of ear myiasis in an infected sheep in Sarbogard, Hungary. Photographed by Martin Hall

Background imageMammalia Collection: Cuterebra, rodent botfly

Cuterebra, rodent botfly
3rd instar or stage of the rodent botfly found on a spiny rat (Proechimys sp.) in French Guiana. Photographed by Martin Hall

Background imageMammalia Collection: Gyrostigma rhinocerontis, botfly maggot

Gyrostigma rhinocerontis, botfly maggot
A adult rhino botfly maggot (Gyrostigma rhinocerontis) extracted from a white rhino, Merseyside. Photographed by Martin Hall

Background imageMammalia Collection: Fossil tooth of some extinct monstrous unknown animal from W

Fossil tooth of some extinct monstrous unknown animal from W
Plate 1 from Strata Identified by Organized Fossils by William Smith (1816-1819) (Mastodon arvernensis Croizet & Jobert from Norwich Crag, Pleistocene)

Background imageMammalia Collection: Six million year old elephant

Six million year old elephant excavated during Paleontology field work, Emirate of Abu Dhabi

Background imageMammalia Collection: Excavations, Abu Dhabi

Excavations, Abu Dhabi
Palaeontologists from the Natural History Museum, London, excavate an fossil elephant dating back six million years during an expedition to the Emirate of Abu Dhabi

Background imageMammalia Collection: Excavations, Pakistan

Excavations, Pakistan
Palaeontologists from the Natural History Museum, London engage in excavations in Pakistan in search for fossil mammals dating back one million years

Background imageMammalia Collection: Tibetan horse minder

Tibetan horse minder
A young Tibetan horse minder, Urulung, Tibet

Background imageMammalia Collection: Elephant rib

Elephant rib
An elephant rib that is approximately 6 million years old. From Paleo field trip, Emirate of Abu Dhabi

Background imageMammalia Collection: Homo heidelbergensis mandible (Mauer 1)

Homo heidelbergensis mandible (Mauer 1)

Background imageMammalia Collection: Mylodon darwinii, ground sloth toenails

Mylodon darwinii, ground sloth toenails
13, 000 year old specimens of ground sloth toenails dating from the Pleistocene, Chile

Background imageMammalia Collection: Tooth of Hippopotamus amphibius

Tooth of Hippopotamus amphibius

Background imageMammalia Collection: Australopithecus africanus mandible (MLD 2)

Australopithecus africanus mandible (MLD 2)
Mandible and teeth of an adolescent male (of about 12 years) Australopithecus africanus discovered at Makapansgat by A.R. Hughes and S. Kitching in July 1948

Background imageMammalia Collection: Suncus murinus caerulescens, Indian grey musk-shrew

Suncus murinus caerulescens, Indian grey musk-shrew
Young Musk Rats. Annotated watercolour drawing by Oliva Fanny Tonge (1858-1949), from one of 16 sketchbooks presented to the Natural History Museum in 1952

Background imageMammalia Collection: Ground sloth skin

Ground sloth skin
Skin of the extinct ground sloth (Mylodon darwinii). This is a 13, 000 year old specimen from the Pleistocene, Chile

Background imageMammalia Collection: Zaedyus pichiy, pichi armadillo

Zaedyus pichiy, pichi armadillo
Pichi armadillo collected by Charles Darwin at Bahia Blanca, Argentina, 1833 (formerly Daspus minutus)

Background imageMammalia Collection: Homo erectus, Solo Man cranium (Ngandong 1)

Homo erectus, Solo Man cranium (Ngandong 1)
The cranium cast of Solo Man discovered at Ngandong close to the Solo River on the island of Java, Indonesia. The specimen belonging to Homo erectus dates back to no later than 800, 000 years ago

Background imageMammalia Collection: Paranthropus robustus jaw bone

Paranthropus robustus jaw bone
Lower jaws of Australopithecus robustus. A robustus lived between 1.8 and 1.5 million years ago in South Africa

Background imageMammalia Collection: Sivapithecus & human mandible

Sivapithecus & human mandible
A human mandible (on the left) compared with a Sivapithecus mandible. Sivapithecus, an extinct ape from the Miocene, is believed to have lived 9 million years ago

Background imageMammalia Collection: Sivapithecus sivalensis

Sivapithecus sivalensis
Fragments of cranium and mandible of an extinct ape-like primate Sivapithecus sivalensis which lived about 8 million years ago. The specimen was discovered in Potwar, Pakistan

Background imageMammalia Collection: Homo sapiens brain

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

Background imageMammalia Collection: A Homo habilis hammerstone

A Homo habilis hammerstone
A hammerstone tool discovered at the Olduvia Gorge, Tanzania dating back to between 1.85 million years ago to 1.6 million years ago

Background imageMammalia Collection: Sivapithecus meteai cranial fragment

Sivapithecus meteai cranial fragment
A lower fragment of the cranium of Sivapithecus meteai showing maxilla, incisors, canine, premolars and molars. This specimen dates back 9 million years and was discovered in Yassorien, Turkey

Background imageMammalia Collection: Panthera tigris sumatrae, Sumatran tiger

Panthera tigris sumatrae, Sumatran tiger
Photograph of a Sumatran tiger skin specimen. Collection number 1935.4.6.3

Background imageMammalia Collection: Equus zebra, zebra

Equus zebra, zebra
Photograph of a zebra skin specimen, collection number Z 1993.149

Background imageMammalia Collection: Ursus arctos, grizzly bear

Ursus arctos, grizzly bear
Ursus-Ferox (Lewis & Clark), Grizzly Bear (Males). Plate 131 from The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America, Vol. 3, 1848, by John James Audubon (1785-1851) and John Bachman (1790-1874)

Background imageMammalia Collection: Sylvilagus palustris, marsh rabbit

Sylvilagus palustris, marsh rabbit
Lepus 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)

Background imageMammalia Collection: Tamiasciurus douglasii, Douglas squirrel

Tamiasciurus douglasii, Douglas squirrel
Sciurus Longipilis, Long Haired Squirrel. Plate 27 from The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America, Vol. 2, 1846, by John James Audubon (1785-1851) and John Bachman (1790-1874)

Background imageMammalia Collection: Arachnids in an amber pendant

Arachnids in an amber pendant
Two arachnids (Phalaphium sp.) harvestman and (Oxyopes sp.) lynx spider trapped and preserved in amber. The amber has been made into a pendant for a necklace

Background imageMammalia Collection: Mustela erminea, ermine

Mustela erminea, ermine
Plate 33 from the Collection of Watercolour Drawings of British Vertebrates, 1830-1841, by William MacGillivray (1796-1851)

Background imageMammalia Collection: Indian gold tore and nose ring c. 1912

Indian gold tore and nose ring c. 1912
Annotated watercolour drawing by Oliva Fanny Tonge (1858-1949), from one of 16 sketchbooks presented to the Natural History Museum in 1952

Background imageMammalia Collection: Human biology

Human biology
Find out about the different kinds of memory we use, the Human biology gallery

Background imageMammalia Collection: Sus sp. hog, Old English breed

Sus sp. hog, Old English breed
Plate 3 from The Breeds of the Domestic Animals of the British Islands Vol. 2, 1842, by David Low (1786-1859)

Background imageMammalia Collection: Rhinocerotidae (family), rhinoceros

Rhinocerotidae (family), rhinoceros
Woodcut engraving published on page 953 of of Historiae Animalium, Vol. 1 De Quadrupedibus Viviparis (Viviparous Quadrupeds), 1555-1558, by Konrad Gesner (1516-1565)

Background imageMammalia Collection: Erinaceus europaeus, western European hedgehog

Erinaceus europaeus, western European hedgehog
Plate 120 Hedgehog. Original watercolour drawing from The Naturalists Library, Mammalia, Vol. 2, 1833-1843, by Sir William Jardine (1800-1874)

Background imageMammalia Collection: Zygolophodon atticus, mastodon

Zygolophodon atticus, mastodon
Front view of a skull of an extinct elephant from the Miocene of Pikermi, Greece. This fossil gave rise to the myth of the one-eyed giant, Cyclops

Background imageMammalia Collection: Megazostrodon skull

Megazostrodon skull
Specimen from the Late Triassic to Early Jurassic of Lesotho, Africa. Megazostrodon was thought to be a small, mouse-sized, nocturnal mammal and fed on insects

Background imageMammalia Collection: Hippopotamus amphibius, hippopotamus

Hippopotamus amphibius, hippopotamus
Plate 67 The Hippopotamus. Original watercolour drawing from The Naturalists Library, Mammalia, Vol. 2, 1833-1843, by Sir William Jardine (1800-1874)

Background imageMammalia Collection: Three unicorns

Three unicorns
Monoceros Unicornu and Caprinonq Marinq. Tab 10 from Beschriving Van de Natuur der Vier-voetige Dieren, 1660 by I. Johnston

Background imageMammalia Collection: Sea-horse

Sea-horse
Page 234 from Curious Creatures in Zoology, 1890 by John Ashton

Background imageMammalia Collection: Megatherium skeleton

Megatherium skeleton
Plate 72 from Le Regne Animal Vol 2 by Georges Cuvier

Background imageMammalia Collection: Modern Homo sapiens. A range of human remains (cranial and p

Modern Homo sapiens. A range of human remains (cranial and p
Cranium fragments belonging to Modern Homo sapiens dating back 12, 000 years ago discovered at Goughs Cave, Cheddar Gorge, Somerset

Background imageMammalia Collection: Mammoth

Mammoth
Skeleton of the mammoth in the St. Petersburg Museum. from The World before the Deluge Figuier 1981. by Louis Figier

Background imageMammalia Collection: Pteropus loochoensis, Okinawa flying fox

Pteropus loochoensis, Okinawa flying fox
A rare specimen of an Okinawa flying fox skin from the collections of the Natural History Museum, London



All Professionally Made to Order for Quick Shipping