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Odonata Collection

Background imageOdonata Collection: Plate 17 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier

Plate 17 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier
Illustration of dragonflies. Plate 17 from Libellulinae Europaeae illustrated and described by Toussint de Charpentier, 1840

Background imageOdonata Collection: Dragonflies and damselflies

Dragonflies and damselflies from Collection of Drawings by Dutch Artists, 17th-19th centuries. Held in the Entomology Library at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageOdonata Collection: Plate 45 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier

Plate 45 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier
Illustration of dragonflies. Plate 45 from Libellulinae Europaeae illustrated and described by Toussaint von Charpentier (1780-1847), 1840

Background imageOdonata Collection: Urogomphus eximus, fossil dragonfly

Urogomphus eximus, fossil dragonfly
A fossil Jurassic dragonfly about 140 million years old, from the Kimmeridgian Lithographic Stone, Solenhofen, Bavaria, Germany

Background imageOdonata Collection: Aeshna sp. dragonflies

Aeshna sp. dragonflies
Dragonflies illustrated and described by Toussaint de Charpentier in Libellulinae europaeae descriptae e depictae (1840)

Background imageOdonata Collection: Plate 13 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier

Plate 13 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier
Illustration of dragonflies. Plate 13 from Libellulinae Europaeae illustrated and described by Toussaint von Charpentier (1780-1847). 1840

Background imageOdonata Collection: Libellulium longialata, dragonfly

Libellulium longialata, dragonfly
Fossil dragonfly from the Late Jurassic (150 million years old), Germany. On display in From the Beginning, Gallery 63, Earth Galleries at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageOdonata Collection: Curtis British Entomology Plate 732

Curtis British Entomology Plate 732
Odonata: Agrion rubellum = Ceriagrion tenellum [Plant: Illecebrum verticillatum (Coral-necklace)] Date: 1824-39

Background imageOdonata Collection: Curtis British Entomology Plate 712

Curtis British Entomology Plate 712
Odonata: Libellula rubicunda, probably = Leucorrhinia dubia [Plant: Carex digitata (Fingered Sedge)] Date: 1824-39

Background imageOdonata Collection: Curtis British Entomology Plate 616

Curtis British Entomology Plate 616
Odonata: Cordulia curtisii = Oxygastra curtisii [Plant: Luzula campestris (Field Wood-rush)] Date: 1824-39

Background imageOdonata Collection: Migrant Hawker (lower), Brown Hawker (upper)

Migrant Hawker (lower), Brown Hawker (upper)
Watercolour on vellum, c.late 17th century Rachel Ruysch (1664-1750). From the collection of Insect paintings by Dutch Artists 17th-19th Century. Held in the Library and Archives

Background imageOdonata Collection: Libellula depressa, broad-bodied chaser

Libellula depressa, broad-bodied chaser
A male broad-bodied chaser dragonfly (Libellula depressa). Specimen held at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageOdonata Collection: Asilidae, robber flies

Asilidae, robber flies

Background imageOdonata Collection: Turanophlebia, fossil dragonfly

Turanophlebia, fossil dragonfly
With a wingspan close to 7 cm, Turanophlebia is one of several dragonflies rrecorded from the Jurassic Solnhofen Limestone of Bavaria

Background imageOdonata Collection: Damselfly

Damselfly
Specimen held in the Natural History Museum Paleontology Department. This specimen is 34 million years old, and was found in Florissant, Colorado. This species is now extinct

Background imageOdonata Collection: Aeschna pilosa, dragonfiles

Aeschna pilosa, dragonfiles
Plate 21, an illustration of two dragonflies from Libellulinae Europaeae 1840 by Toussaint de Charpentier

Background imageOdonata Collection: Detail of terracotta moulding of a dragonfly in the Waterhou

Detail of terracotta moulding of a dragonfly in the Waterhou
The Waterhouse Buiding at the Natural History Museum, London was designed by Alfred Waterhouse (1830-1905) and first opened its doors on Easter Monday 1881

Background imageOdonata Collection: Dragonflies and Fish

Dragonflies and Fish
Dragonflies from Libellulinae Europaeae by Toussaint de Charpenter, 1840. Fish from Voyage de la Coquille, Zoology Atlas II by Duperrey

Background imageOdonata Collection: Calopteryx splendens, banded demoiselle

Calopteryx splendens, banded demoiselle. Illustration taken from Moses Harris, An Exposition of English Insects, 1776-1780

Background imageOdonata Collection: Cymatophlebia longialata, fossil dragonfly

Cymatophlebia longialata, fossil dragonfly

Background imageOdonata Collection: Anax imperator, emperor dragonfly egg

Anax imperator, emperor dragonfly egg
This spindle-shaped egg of the emperor dragonfly is typical of a species that lays its eggs inside the stems or leaves of plants. Next to the egg is the prolarva

Background imageOdonata Collection: Sympetrum striolatum, common darter dragonfly

Sympetrum striolatum, common darter dragonfly
Emerging from the larval skin, which may take over two hours. The head and thorax begin to burst out of the larval skin

Background imageOdonata Collection: Plate 22 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier

Plate 22 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier
Illustration of dragonflies. Plate 22 from Libellulinae Europaeae illustrated and described by Toussaint von Charpentier (1780-1847), 1840

Background imageOdonata Collection: Plate 15 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier

Plate 15 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier
Illustration of dragonflies. Plate 15 from Libellulinae Europaeae illustrated and described by Toussint de Charpentier, 1840

Background imageOdonata Collection: Plate 11 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier

Plate 11 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier
Illustration of dragonflies. Plate 11 from Libellulinae Europaeae illustrated and described by Toussint de Charpentier, 1840

Background imageOdonata Collection: Damselfly wings in amber

Damselfly wings in amber
A pair of overlapping Damsel fly wings preserved in Baltic amber. Dating from the Upper Eocene

Background imageOdonata Collection: Plate 18 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier

Plate 18 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier
Illustration of dragonflies. Plate 18 from Libellulinae Europaeae illustrated and described by Toussint de Charpentier, 1840

Background imageOdonata Collection: Plate 30 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier

Plate 30 from Libellulinae Europaeae by de Charpentier
Illustration of dragonflies. Plate 30 from Libellulinae Europaeae illustrated and described by Toussint de Charpentier, 1840

Background imageOdonata Collection: Coenagrion puella, azure damselfly

Coenagrion puella, azure damselfly
Azure dameselflies (Coenagrion puella) are often seen in the Wildlife Garden at the Natural History Museum, London. May 2003

Background imageOdonata Collection: Dragonfly from decorative ceiling panels

Dragonfly from decorative ceiling panels

Background imageOdonata Collection: Southern Damselfly

Southern Damselfly from the collections at the Natural History Museum

Background imageOdonata Collection: Hawker dragonfly

Hawker dragonfly
A hawker dragonfly at rest, photographed in the Wildlife Garden at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageOdonata Collection: Pyrrhosoma nymphula, large red damselfly

Pyrrhosoma nymphula, large red damselfly
A close-up of a large red damselfly perched on a leaf. This species of damselfly is among the first to be seen each Spring

Background imageOdonata Collection: Erasipteron bolsoveri, dragonfly

Erasipteron bolsoveri, dragonfly
Impression from the wing of an extinct dragonfly-like insect found by Malcolm Spenser in Bolsover coal mine in 1978


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