mail_outline sales@mediastorehouse.com
Pterodactyls considered as marsupial batsPterodactylus crassirostris above P. brevirostris. Plate from Note on the Pterodactyle Tribe... Paper in The Zoologist, Vol 1, 1843 by Edward Newman
Petaurus breviceps ariel, sugar gliderPetaurus breviceps ariel (Gould, 1849) sugar glider. BMNH 1842.5.26.1, female skin & skull, lectotype photographed next to specimen BMNH 1855.12.24.308 paralectotype skin
Group of Kangaroos by Gambier BoltonGroup of Kangaroos photogrpaph by Gambier Bolton, F Zs 553, held at The Natural History Museum at Tring
Emu, rheas and kangaroos at Tring ParkLive animals collected by Walter Rothschild in the grounds of Tring Park, with keeper Mr Marcham, 1890 Date: 1890
Vombatus ursinus, common wombatPlate 8 from a collection of 49 original watercolour drawings of animals by Ferdinand Lucas Bauer (1760-1826), from the H.M.S. Investigator expedition to Australia, 1801-1803
Bettongia penicillata, brush-tailed bettongPlate 61 of Bettongia penicillata, brush-tailed bettong from John Goulds The Mammals of Australia, Vol. II 1863
Caloprymnus campestris, Desert rat-kangarooThe Desert-rat kangaroo (Caloprymnus campestris) is an extinct marsupial that lived in Australia. Specimen held at the Natural History Museum, London. Photographed by Harry Taylor, 2010
Lutreolina crassicaudata, thick-tailed opossumIllustration of Lutreolina crassicaudata, thick-tailed opossum
Lemur skulls from MadagascarTwo skulls show the incredible diversity of lemurs on Madagascar
Phalangista rulpin, possumPhalangista rulpina. Plate 16 from Mammals of Australia Volume 1, by John Gould, 1863
Macropus laniger, great red kangarooMacropus laniger. From A Monograph of the Macropodid, or family of Kangaroos, 1841 by John Gould (1804-1881)
Macropus sp. kangarooZoological drawing 4 (1:4) Kanguru. Probably the first European drawing of a kangaroo, by Sydney Parkinson (1745-1771), made during Captain Cooks first voyage of discovery, 1768-1771
Perameles nasuta, long-nosed bandicoot
A native spearing a kangarooDrawing 74 from the Watling Collection titled A Native spearing a Kangaroo by a Port Jackson Painter, 1788-1797
Petaurus breviceps, sugar gliderMarsupial, Native name Dab-bie, possibly by Thomas Watling (1762 -c. 1814), from the Thomas Watling Drawings Collection, 1788-c. 1797, held at the Natural History Museum
Sarcophilus laniarius, Tasmanian devilJaw of a Tasmanian devil from the collections at the Natural History Museum
Macropus antilopinus, antilopine wallaby (Gould 1842) BMNH 1842 5 26 5 (291A), male skin and skull lectotype. Photographed alongside is the female specimen BMNH 1824 5 26 4
Perameles bougainville, barred bandicootPlate 2 from a collection of 49 original watercolour drawings of animals by Ferdinand Lucas Bauer (1760-1826), from the H.M.S. Investigator expedition to Australia, 1801-1803
A group of mammals and birdsPlate 37, hand coloured engraving, from Thesaurus Volume 1, 1734, by Albertus Seba (1665-1736)
Acrobates pygmaeus, pygmy gliderMarsupial, Flying Squirrel or Mouse. Drawing 86, possibly by Thomas Watling (1762 -c. 1814), from the Thomas Watling Drawings Collection, 1788-c. 1797, held at the Natural History Museum
Potorous tridactylus gilbertii, Gilberts potorooMarsupial. Drawing 89 by Thomas Watling (1762 -c. 1814), from the Thomas Watling Drawings Collection, 1788-c. 1797, held at the Natural History Museum
Chaeropus ecaudatus, pig-footed bandicootsPencil and chalk drawing by John Gould (1804-1881) c. 1845
Phascolarctos cinereus, koalaIllustration from The Mammals of Australia (1863) by John Gould
Australasia book coverFront cover of Australasia by Alfred Russel Wallace, 1893
Monodelphis fosteri, shrewish short-tailed opossum, skin and skull. Specimen taken from the Natural History Museum mammals collection
Petrogale inornata, rock wallabyPlate 10 from Zoological drawings by Ferdinand Bauer (1760-1826). Held in the Zoology Library at the Natural History Museum, London