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Reptilia Collection (page 7)

Background imageReptilia Collection: Ceratosaurus

Ceratosaurus
Anterior skeleton of the bipedal carnivorous dinosaur, Ceretosaurus, mounted for display at the US National Museum of Natural History, Washington DC. This dinosaur lived 150 to 144 million years ago

Background imageReptilia Collection: Tortoise and armadillo comparison

Tortoise and armadillo comparison
A really strange picture, reminds me of 1960s New York art

Background imageReptilia Collection: Mesosaurus tenuidens fossil

Mesosaurus tenuidens fossil
Anterior portion of skeleton of the extinct reptile, Mesosaurus tenuidens gervais from the Karoo Formation, Griqualand West, South Africa. Cast of the type specimen

Background imageReptilia Collection: Mounted tortoise specimen

Mounted tortoise specimen
Photograph of a mounted tortoise specimen from the collections of the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageReptilia Collection: Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins (1807-1889)

Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins (1807-1889)

Background imageReptilia Collection: Professor Thomas Bell (1792-1880)

Professor Thomas Bell (1792-1880)
Portrait of Professor Thomas Bell, an English zoologist, surgeon and writer. Photographed by Maull & Polyblank, Photographers, c. 1854

Background imageReptilia Collection: Reptiles of Port Essington

Reptiles of Port Essington. An article written by Gilbert, John (1812-1845). Gould Australian Collection 8/3/2p. Page two of two

Background imageReptilia Collection: Oedura marmorata, marbled velvet gecko

Oedura marmorata, marbled velvet gecko. Lectotype, catalogue number BMNH XXII 2b

Background imageReptilia Collection: Lophognathus gilberti, gilberts dragon

Lophognathus gilberti, gilberts dragon
Designated holotype of Lophognathus gilberti, gilbert?s dragon. Catalogue number BMNH 1946.8.28.69 (XXIII.44ce). M. Spirit specimen. rnPort Essington [collected 1838-1849]

Background imageReptilia Collection: Agama by John Edward Gray

Agama by John Edward Gray
Note on a peculiar structure in the head of an Agama by John Edward Gray. Passage taken from Zoological Miscellany by John Edward Gray, 1831. Part two of two

Background imageReptilia Collection: Reptiles from New Zealand

Reptiles from New Zealand
Descriptions of two hitherto unrecorded species of Reptiles from New Zealand. Passage taken from The Zoological Miscellany by John Edward Gray, 1831

Background imageReptilia Collection: Mr William Walker

Mr William Walker
Holding a Baryonyx claw. Baryonyx was found in 1983 in a clay pit in Surrey, England, by the British amateur fossil hunter William Walker

Background imageReptilia Collection: Sauropod skin impression

Sauropod skin impression
Dinosaurs belonging to the suborder of Sauropods (Sauropoda) like diplodocus had a relatively smooth skin covered in scales of different sizes

Background imageReptilia Collection: Euparkeria

Euparkeria
A model of Euparkeria. This was an early archosauriform, a type of carnivorous and terrestrial reptile that lived around 225 million years ago during the Early Triassic period

Background imageReptilia Collection: Dilophosaurus

Dilophosaurus
The Dilophosaurus, meaning double crested lizard was a fast predatory dinosaur which lived about 200 to 189 million years ago during the Lower Jurassic. Fossils have been found in Arizona, USA

Background imageReptilia Collection: Sauropod excavation, 1988

Sauropod excavation, 1988
Team cleaning exposed elements of the fore and hind limbs of a Sauropod dinosaur in Niger, 1988

Background imageReptilia Collection: Temnodontosaurus platyodon (Conybeare)

Temnodontosaurus platyodon (Conybeare)
The skull of Temnodontosaurus platyodon, an Ichthyosaurus which lived between 201 and 194 million years ago in the Lower Jurassic. It was discovered by Mary Annings brother in 1811 in Lyme Regis

Background imageReptilia Collection: Jurassic seascape

Jurassic seascape
Artists impression of a Jurassic sea with Ichthyosaur, Plesiosaur and Pterosaur. The Jurassic period was 205-144 million years ago

Background imageReptilia Collection: Mounted specimen of Crocodylus sp. crocodile

Mounted specimen of Crocodylus sp. crocodile
Photograph of a mounted crocodile specimen from the collections of the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageReptilia Collection: Eusthenopteron foordi

Eusthenopteron foordi
A fossil specimen of the head and pectoral fin of Eusthenopteron foordi, an Upper Devonian reptile from Scaumenac Bay, P.Q. Canada

Background imageReptilia Collection: Pterodactyl kochi

Pterodactyl kochi

Background imageReptilia Collection: Brachiosaur back vertebra

Brachiosaur back vertebra
A specimen of a back vertebra that once belonged to a dinosaur from the Brachiosauridae family. This family of dinosaurs lived during the Jurassic and Cretaceous period

Background imageReptilia Collection: Ichthyosaur, Stenopterygius quadriscissus (Quenstedt) close-

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

Background imageReptilia Collection: Dimorphodon macronyx

Dimorphodon macronyx
The fossil skull and lower jaw belonging to Dimorphodon macronyx. It was a giant flying reptile, or Pterosaur that lived during the Lower Jurassic period

Background imageReptilia Collection: Gasosaurus

Gasosaurus was a flesh-eating bipedal dinosaur which lived during the middle Jurassic, about 160 mya. It was up to 4 metres long and 2 metres high with short arms

Background imageReptilia Collection: Dinosaur footprint

Dinosaur footprint
Fossil footprints belonging to a three toed dinosaur (Tridactyl)

Background imageReptilia Collection: Turtle shell

Turtle shell
A close up image of turtle shell depicting the interlocking hexagonal plates

Background imageReptilia Collection: Snake skin

Snake skin

Background imageReptilia Collection: Varanus gouldii, Goulds monitor

Varanus gouldii, Goulds monitor
Plate 151 from Natural History of Victoria (1887) by Sir Frederick McCoy

Background imageReptilia Collection: Varanus eremius and Varanus gilleri

Varanus eremius and Varanus gilleri
Rusty desert monitor (Varanus eremius) and pigmy mulga monitor (Varanus gilleri). Plate 8 from Report of the Horn Expedition to Central Australia (1896)

Background imageReptilia Collection: Lacerta viridis, green lizard

Lacerta viridis, green lizard
Plate 38 from Proc. Zoological Society London, 1884 of various views of a green lizard. Held in the Zoology Library at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageReptilia Collection: Dinosaurs Gallery

Dinosaurs Gallery
A wide-angle view of the Natural History Museums Dinosaur Galery

Background imageReptilia Collection: Ophthalmosaurus icenius, ichthyosaur

Ophthalmosaurus icenius, ichthyosaur
Close up of the eye socket of an extinct marine reptile from the Middle Jurassic (161-157 million years ago) on display in the Central Hall at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageReptilia Collection: Ichthyosaurus communis, ichthyosaur

Ichthyosaurus communis, ichthyosaur
Close up of the jaw of an ichthyosaur specimen on display at The Natural History Museum, London. Specimen collected by Mary Anning

Background imageReptilia Collection: Emydoidea blandingi, Blandings terrapin

Emydoidea blandingi, Blandings terrapin
Small North American Blandings terrapins. Specimens held at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageReptilia Collection: Reptile specimens in the Darwin Centre

Reptile specimens in the Darwin Centre
Various reptile specimens stored in spirit in the Darwin Centre, at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageReptilia Collection: Crocodilus niloticus, Nile crocodile eggs

Crocodilus niloticus, Nile crocodile eggs
The Natural History Museums collections include examples of earlier life history stages as well as adults, and these are also preserved in spirit

Background imageReptilia Collection: Tropidolaemus wagleri, green pit viper

Tropidolaemus wagleri, green pit viper
Also known as the temple viper or Waglers pit viper. It is a tree dwelling snake found in South-east Asia. Specimen held at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageReptilia Collection: Zoological specimens in the Darwin Centre

Zoological specimens in the Darwin Centre
Specimens in spirit jars stored in the Darwin Centre, at the Natural History Museum, London. Assembled over hundreds of years

Background imageReptilia Collection: Man wearing snake, 1930s

Man wearing snake, 1930s
This young man, possibly a junior member of the Zoology Department, is posing with a king cobra (Ophiophagus hannah) that presumably had just arrived at the Museum

Background imageReptilia Collection: Girl with dinosaur bone, 1920s

Girl with dinosaur bone, 1920s
In the Fossil Reptile gallery, this young woman holds a yardstick against a cast of the right humerus or upper arm bone of Tornieria africana, named in 1911 after German palaeontologist

Background imageReptilia Collection: Open case with snake skeleton, 1939. The Natural History Mu

Open case with snake skeleton, 1939. The Natural History Mu
This Indian python skeleton, Python molurus, is still on display today

Background imageReptilia Collection: Andrew Stimson

Andrew Stimson identifying marine turtles that have been confiscated by H.M. Customs

Background imageReptilia Collection: Opheodrys sp. green snake

Opheodrys sp. green snake
Hand coloured etching from The Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama islands (1731) Vol. 2 by Mark Catesby. Entitled The Green Snake

Background imageReptilia Collection: Thamnophis sp. garter snake

Thamnophis sp. garter snake
Hand coloured etching from The Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama islands (1731) Vol. 2 by Mark Catesby. Entitled The Green Spotted Snake

Background imageReptilia Collection: Thamnophis sp. ribbon-snake

Thamnophis sp. ribbon-snake
Hand coloured etching from The Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama islands (1731) Vol. 2 by Mark Catesby. Entitled The Ribbon Snake

Background imageReptilia Collection: Nerodia erythrogaster, copperbelly snake

Nerodia erythrogaster, copperbelly snake
Hand coloured etching from The Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama islands (1731) Vol. 2 by Mark Catesby. Entitled The Copperbelly Snake



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