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Canis MagellanicusIllustration (plate 5) from Charles Darwins Zoology of the Voyage of the Beagle, Mammalia, Part 2, No.1, 1838
Toxodon platensisPleistocene specimen collected by Charles Darwin near Montevideo, Uraguay during the Voyage of the Beagle 1832-1836. Skull length is 66 cms
Beelat (aboriginal name)
MyotragusThis animal which lived around 6000 years ago was from the antelope group. Its remains have been found in the Balearic islands
Glyptodon claipes specimen on display in the Central Hall at the Natural History Museum, London. It was the most armoured of all the ice age mammals
Monodelphis fosteri, shrewish short-tailed opossum, skin and skull. Specimen taken from the Natural History Museum mammals collection
Baby mammothFound in the permafrost in 1977, this baby mammoth Dima, estimated to be 6-7 months old at the time of its death, was displayed in London in 1979
Stuffed primates in Gallery 1, The Natural History Museum atStuffed primate specimens on display at the Natural History Museum at Tring, part of the Natural History Museum, London
Fossil tooth of some extinct monstrous unknown animal from WPlate 1 from Strata Identified by Organized Fossils by William Smith (1816-1819) (Mastodon arvernensis Croizet & Jobert from Norwich Crag, Pleistocene)
Six million year old elephant excavated during Paleontology field work, Emirate of Abu Dhabi
Excavations, Abu DhabiPalaeontologists from the Natural History Museum, London, excavate an fossil elephant dating back six million years during an expedition to the Emirate of Abu Dhabi
Elephant ribAn elephant rib that is approximately 6 million years old. From Paleo field trip, Emirate of Abu Dhabi
Mylodon darwinii, ground sloth toenails13, 000 year old specimens of ground sloth toenails dating from the Pleistocene, Chile
Tooth of Hippopotamus amphibius
Ground sloth skinSkin of the extinct ground sloth (Mylodon darwinii). This is a 13, 000 year old specimen from the Pleistocene, Chile
Homo sapiens brainA cast of a human (Homo sapiens) brain held at the Natural History Museum, London
A Homo habilis hammerstoneA hammerstone tool discovered at the Olduvia Gorge, Tanzania dating back to between 1.85 million years ago to 1.6 million years ago
Indian gold tore and nose ring c. 1912Annotated watercolour drawing by Oliva Fanny Tonge (1858-1949), from one of 16 sketchbooks presented to the Natural History Museum in 1952
Three unicornsMonoceros Unicornu and Caprinonq Marinq. Tab 10 from Beschriving Van de Natuur der Vier-voetige Dieren, 1660 by I. Johnston
Megatherium skeletonPlate 72 from Le Regne Animal Vol 2 by Georges Cuvier
MammothSkeleton of the mammoth in the St. Petersburg Museum. from The World before the Deluge Figuier 1981. by Louis Figier
Diceros bicornis, horn of a black rhinocerosA photograph of a black rhinoceros horn specimen from the collections of the Natural History Museum, London