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Protista Collection (page 2)

Background imageProtista Collection: Foraminifera models

Foraminifera models
One drawer containing some of d Orbigny models and slides previously displayed alongside the models in the galleries

Background imageProtista Collection: Foraminifera

Foraminifera
Part of the display of foraminifera from The Great Exhibition of 1851. Featured are specimens from the London Clay, the Paris Basin and the Gulf of Suez

Background imageProtista Collection: Difflugia Corona

Difflugia Corona
Freshwater Testate Amoebae. Magnification x 450

Background imageProtista Collection: Usnea inflata, beard lichen

Usnea inflata, beard lichen
And Hypogymnia physodes (right), Burnham Beeches, Bucks, W. London. The former is a recent colonist following reductions in SO2 pollution

Background imageProtista Collection: Trypanosomes

Trypanosomes
Scanning electron microscope image showing a trypanosoma blood smear. They have proved to be of great interest as they have evolved very differently to other better studied organisms

Background imageProtista Collection: Chorda filum, sea lace

Chorda filum, sea lace
Cut out of mounted specimen of sea lace or Dead mans rope. A brown seaweed, this specimen is 14.5 feet long and held at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageProtista Collection: Globigerina

Globigerina
Plate 77 from Voyage of the H.M.S. Challenger 1873-1876. Zoology Vol. 9. Foraminifera Plates, 1884 by C. Wyville Thomson

Background imageProtista Collection: Orbitolites - Alveolina

Orbitolites - Alveolina
Plate 17 from Voyage of H.M.S. Challenger (1872-1876). Zoology Vol. 9. Foraminifera Plates, 1884 by C. Wyville Thomson

Background imageProtista Collection: Thurammina - Cyclammina

Thurammina - Cyclammina
Plate 37 from Voyage of H.M.S. Challenger 1873-1876. Zoology Vol. 9. Foraminifera Plates, 1884 by C. Wyville Thomson

Background imageProtista Collection: Carpenteria & Polytrema

Carpenteria & Polytrema
Plate 100 from Voyage of the H.M.S. Challenger 1873-1876. Zoology Vol. 9. Foraminifera Plates, 1884 by C Wyville Thomson

Background imageProtista Collection: Cristellaria

Cristellaria
Plate 68 from Voyage of the H.M.S. Challenger 1873-1876. Zoology Vol. 9. Foraminifera Plates, 1884 by C. Wyville Thomson

Background imageProtista Collection: Dumontia contorta, seaweed

Dumontia contorta, seaweed

Background imageProtista Collection: Scinaia forcellata, seaweed

Scinaia forcellata, seaweed
Cut out of specimen of marine alga or seaweed collected by Holmes in Enoura, Japan. Specimen is held in the Crypt. Herbarium at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageProtista Collection: Emiliania huxleyi coccosphere

Emiliania huxleyi coccosphere
Coccosphere of Emiliania huxleyi from the Western Mediterranean. E. huxleyi is one of the most widespread species on earth

Background imageProtista Collection: Desmarestia ligulata, seaweed

Desmarestia ligulata, seaweed
Page 55 from Algae Danmonienses: or dried specimens of Marine Plants, principally collected in Devonshire by Mary Wyatt; carefully named according to Dr. Hookers British Flora

Background imageProtista Collection: Amphitetras, diatom

Amphitetras, diatom
Scanning electron microscope (SEM) image showing the diatom Amphitetras with its ornate silica shell (x5000 on a standard 9 cm wide print). Coloured artificially by computer

Background imageProtista Collection: Frontispiece of Catalogue Raisonne d une collection

Frontispiece of Catalogue Raisonne d une collection
Illustration by Francois Boucher from the book Catalogue Raisonne d une collection by Edme Francois Gersaint, 1744

Background imageProtista Collection: Tonguestone (sharks tooth)

Tonguestone (sharks tooth)
A sharks tooth from the species Oxyrhina. Specimen originates from the Globigerina Limestone, Miocene period, NW Malta

Background imageProtista Collection: The pond in the Wildlife Garden

The pond in the Wildlife Garden. Photographed by Derek Adams. Published in Wildlife Garden by Roy Vickery, 2004 page 35

Background imageProtista Collection: Ciliate plankton

Ciliate plankton
Scanning electron microscope image of a ciliate showing clearly the microscopic hairs or cilia that they use for movement and feeding (x 700)

Background imageProtista Collection: Fucus vesiculosis, bladderwrack

Fucus vesiculosis, bladderwrack
Illustration from Botany Library Plate Collection at the Natural History Museum, London. By Leopald Trattinick, 1825

Background imageProtista Collection: Acanthoica acanthifera

Acanthoica acanthifera

Background imageProtista Collection: Myxomycetes, plasmodial slime mould

Myxomycetes, plasmodial slime mould
Scanning electron microscope image of a plasmodial slime mould spore (x12000). This mould spends most of its life as a single cell; when they reproduce they form a slug-like blob that can travel

Background imageProtista Collection: Acanthowetra

Acanthowetra
A photograph of a foraminifera found in the Indian Ocean

Background imageProtista Collection: Foraminiferan remains

Foraminiferan remains from the White Cliffs of Dover, U.K. The cliffs are made up of unimaginable numbers of chalky shells of long dead marine animals

Background imageProtista Collection: Coccolithus pelagicus

Coccolithus pelagicus
Coccosphere of Coccolithus pelagicus, a common cold water coccolithophore. Collected from the British Continental shelf, North West of Scotland. Specimen diameter 15m. False-coloured SEM image

Background imageProtista Collection: Florisphaera profunda

Florisphaera profunda
A coccolithophore with highly modified, plate-like coccoliths. This is a very common deep dwelleing species, typically living at about 100-150m depth in the water column

Background imageProtista Collection: Ophiaster formosus

Ophiaster formosus
A coccolithophore with long appendages formed of strings of highly modified coccoliths. Collected from the West Pacific. Specimen diameter 50m. False-coloured SEM image

Background imageProtista Collection: Pontosphaera japonica

Pontosphaera japonica. A coccolithophore with relatively large, flat, coccoliths. Collected from off Hawaii. Specimen diameter 22m. False-coloured SEM image

Background imageProtista Collection: Nummulites gizehensis, giant foraminiferan

Nummulites gizehensis, giant foraminiferan
Shown here is a giant foraminiferan originating from the Eocene of Egypt. Foraminifera are amoeba-like, single-celled protistids and can still be found in abundance today

Background imageProtista Collection: Calyptrolithophora papillifera, holococcolith

Calyptrolithophora papillifera, holococcolith
An SEM of a holococcolith, a nano-fossil, with flat top

Background imageProtista Collection: Iridaea edulis, seaweed

Iridaea edulis, seaweed
Plate 78 from Algae Danmonienses : or dried specimens of Marine Plants, principally collected in Devonshire by Mary Wyatt. 1834-1840

Background imageProtista Collection: Mesogloia multifida, seaweed

Mesogloia multifida, seaweed
Plate 98 from Algae Danmonienses : or dried specimens of Marine Plants, principally collected in Devonshire by Mary Wyatt. Vol. 2 1834-1840

Background imageProtista Collection: Entromorpha clathrata, seaweed

Entromorpha clathrata, seaweed

Background imageProtista Collection: Punctaria plantaginea, seaweed

Punctaria plantaginea, seaweed
Plate 206 from Algae Danmonienses : or dried specimens of Marine Plants, principally collected in Devonshire by Mary Wyatt 1834-1840

Background imageProtista Collection: Codium tomemtosus, seaweed

Codium tomemtosus, seaweed
Plate 35 from Algae Danmonienses : or dried specimens of Marine Plants, principally collected in Devonshire by Mary Wyatt. 1834-1840

Background imageProtista Collection: Rhodomenia reniformis, seaweed

Rhodomenia reniformis, seaweed
Plate 19 from Algae Danmonienses : or dried specimens of Marine Plants, principally collected in Devonshire by Mary Wyatt. 1834-1840

Background imageProtista Collection: Chorda lomentaria, seaweed

Chorda lomentaria, seaweed
Plate from Algae Danmonienses: or dried specimens of Marine Plants, principally collected in Devonshire by Mary Wyatt. 1834-1840



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