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HesperocyonFossil from the Natural History Museum s, Palaeontology Department
Helminthochiton muscronatusFossil from the Natural History Museum s, Palaeontology Department
HyperodapedonFossil from the Natural History Museum s, Palaeontology Department
Kuehneosuchus
StereosternumFossil from the Natural History Museum s, Palaeontology Department
Phragmites oeningensisFossil from the Natural History Museum s, Palaeontology Department
Baragwanathia longifoliaFossil from the Natural History Museum s, Palaeontology Department
LystrosaurusFossil from the Natural History Museums Palaeontology Department
Vanguard cave, GibraltarExterior view of Vanguard Cave, Gibraltar which has been excavated by palaeontologists. Discoveries of interest include chert flake tools and charcoal beds
Palaeontology Response CardThe Palaeontology response card that was used in the Natural History Museum during the 1960s. Enquirers who had send in bones of sheep or horses thinking that they were fossils
Palaeontology Wing of The Natural History MuseumAn extension to The Natural History Museum opened on 24 May 1977
Flint tools from the Pakefield excavation site. Manmade stone tools have been discovered in Suffolk, in the UK, and indicate humans were living there at least 680, 000 years ago
The Palaeontology Wing at The Natural History Museum, LondonThe Palaeontology wing extending to the east of the main Museum frontage, was opened in May 1977 it provides 10, 000 square meters of floor area over seven floors for the study
Ichthyosaur, Stenopterygius quadriscissus (Quenstedt) close-This Ichthyosaur has been preserved with the broken-up skeletons of the unborn young inside. A fourth may have just been born - its skeleton can be seen below her tail
Harpagodes wrightii, gastropodA Jurassic gastropod originating from Gloucestershire, England
Searching for dinosaur fossils, Tendaguru, 1924A team of scientists from the British Museum of Natural History travelled to Tendaguru, Tanganyika territory, Tanzania after the end of World War One in order to locate and collect dinosaur fossils
View of Middle Pleistocene site of Bilzingsleben, GermanyShowing the accumulation of mammal bones and artifacts. Lower Palaeolithic, 400, 000 years old. Photo by Chris Stringer
Hepaticites arcuatusFossil from the Natural History Museum s, Palaeontology Department
Hylomous lyelliFossil from the Natural History Museum s, Palaeontology Department
Excavating at CharmouthA team of palaeontologists from the Natural History Museum excavating an Ichthyosaur at Charmouth beach. December 2004