mail_outline sales@mediastorehouse.com
Fossil tooth of horse, from Bahia BlancaIllustration (p.138) from Charles Darwins Journal of Researches, first illustrated edition 1890
Exhibition of a giraffe to the publicA printed poster advertising the last week of the magnificent living Giraffe or camelopardalis with its Nubian attendant
Blue Whale HallView of Blue Whale Hall, Mammal Gallery, Gallery 24, Life Galleries at The Natural History Museum, London
Australopithecus sp. hip boneThe hip bone (Os coxae) of Australopithecus from Sterkfontein, South Africa
Homo habilis cranium & mandible fragment castsCasts 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
Lutreolina crassicaudata, thick-tailed opossumIllustration of Lutreolina crassicaudata, thick-tailed opossum
Trachypithecus cristatus, silver leaf monkey. Males skull. Catalogue reference 1909.4.1.5
Rhinoceros sondaicus, javan rhinoceros skull from sunderabund, Bengal
Boxgrove excavation siteA view of the archaeological excavation site at Boxgrove, West Sussex, UK. The site yielded a very significant fossil find, a tibia and incisors believe to have belonged to a 500
BatAn illustration (Plate 1, Mammals) from the Zoology of the Beagle
Australopithecus sp. thigh & hip bone
Beached whales alive in a Cornish village, 1932The people of Perranporth, a village not far from Newquay, Cornwall, have just had the surprise of their lives. Eight whales have been found on the beach washed up during a gale
Bubalus bubalis, Indian water buffaloThese are the largest Indian water buffalo horns ever recorded, each almost 2 metres long
Skin from a Ground slothThis rare sloth skin, one of the best examples of its kind, was found in a cave in Chile in the early 1900 s
MylodonIllustration (p.140) from Charles Darwins Journal of Researches, first illustrated edition 1890
Illustration of a seal intestineDrawing of a seal intestine by Edward Wilson. Drawn during the Terra Nova expedition to the South Pole 1910-1913
Fake rodent skeletonSent to the Museum by amateur palaeontologist Reverend C Green in 1843. The skeleton had not been dug out of the ground whole and bones belonged to different individuals
The Modern Mrs JonahEric the Whale at Olympia. Eric, the huge 65-ton whale which arrived at Olympia yesterday from America, was on view there this morning for the first time
Sketch of Dolphins by Edward WilsonPlate one from Edward Wilson sTerra Nova sketch book showing three dolphins
Missourium theristrocaulodon, jaw boneUnearthed in 1840 on the shore of the Pomme de Terre River in Missouri by Albert Koch. The enormous skulls, jaws and bones all belonged to an extinct relative of the elephant
99% Ape cover illustration
Megalomys desmarestii, antillean giant rice rat. Catalogue number NHM 1855.12.24.201
Graomys lockwoodiViews of Graomys lockwoodi skull. Original specimen held at the Natural History Museum, London. Photographed by Harry Taylor, 2010
Exhibition of a giraffe to the public, ManchesterA printed poster advertising the exhibition of a giraffe from the Surrey Zoological Gardens, displayed in Piccadilly, Manchester
Madoqua saltiana, Salts dik-dikOn display in the Natural History Museums whale and mammal gallery (number 24). Its common name, dik-dik (or dikdik) is thought to have dervied from the sound it makes whilst running
Elephant; Walk QuietlyA Natural History Museum poster with an elephant design asking visitors to walk quietly. 1968
Trachypithecus delacouri, delacours langurSkull of Trachypithecus delacouri, delacours langur. Type specimen catalogue number 32.4.19. Male
Oligoryzomys victus, St. Vincent pygmy rice rat (holotype). Catalogue reference NHM 1897.12.26.1)
Cervus unicolor brookei, sambar deerPhotograph of BM(NH) 1.3.13.1 Cervus unicolor brookei, Sarawak
Phyllotis cachinusViews of Phyllotis cachinus skull. Original specimen held at the Natural History Museum, London. Photographed by Harry Taylor, 2010
Engraved mammoth tuskMammoth tusk engraved of Grevettian age. 25, 000 - 30, 000 years ago during the Upper Palaeolithic and within the great Stone Age from Dolni Vestonice, Moravia, Czech Republic
Mylodon darwinii, ground slothJaw bone collected by Charles Darwin when he stepped off the Beagle in Argentina. First officially recorded by Richard Owen, the first Superintendent of the Museum
Lemur skulls from MadagascarTwo skulls show the incredible diversity of lemurs on Madagascar
Bringing in a prisoner illustration (p.84) from Charles Darwins Journal of Researches, first illustrated edition 1890