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Ungulate Collection (page 2)

Background imageUngulate Collection: Phenacodus, extinct genus of ungulate mammals

Phenacodus, extinct genus of ungulate mammals from the late Paleocene through middle Eocene.. Colour printed (chromolithograph)

Background imageUngulate Collection: Palaeotherium, extinct genus of primitive horse-like

Palaeotherium, extinct genus of primitive horse-like perissodactyl ungulate.. Colour printed (chromolithograph) illustration by Heinrich Harder from Tiere der Urwelt Animals of the Prehistoric World

Background imageUngulate Collection: Bandages from a calf mummy

Bandages from a calf mummy

Background imageUngulate Collection: Cervus unicolor brookei

Cervus unicolor brookei
Photograph of BM(NH) 1.3.13.1 Cervus unicolor brookei, Sarawak

Background imageUngulate Collection: Sus scrofa, European wild boar

Sus scrofa, European wild boar
European wild boar piglets. Stuffed specimens on display in Gallery 5 at the Natural History Museum at Tring, part of the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageUngulate Collection: Cervus unicolor brookei, sambar deer

Cervus unicolor brookei, sambar deer
Photograph of BM(NH) 1.3.13.1 Cervus unicolor brookei, Sarawak

Background imageUngulate Collection: Bringing in a prisoner illustration

Bringing in a prisoner illustration (p.84) from Charles Darwins Journal of Researches, first illustrated edition 1890

Background imageUngulate Collection: Boys sketching giraffes, 1949. The Natural History Museum

Boys sketching giraffes, 1949. The Natural History Museum
For the really keen young naturalist aged between 10 and 15, a Junior Naturalists Club was established. Entry was gained by producing a piece of fieldwork to prove ones dedication to the study of

Background imageUngulate Collection: Hyracotherium skull

Hyracotherium skull
Skull, 13 cm long, from the London Clay, Harwich, Essex. Hyracotherium, is the earliest known horse from the late Palaeocene and early Eocene of North America and Europe

Background imageUngulate Collection: Brontotherium skull

Brontotherium skull
Skull measuring 730 mm left to right, without the lower jaw, of Brontotherium, a gigantic Oligocene browsing ungulate from Nabraska, North America

Background imageUngulate Collection: Hyracotherium skeleton

Hyracotherium skeleton
Modelled from various sources. Hyracotherium is the earliest known horse from the late Palaeocene and early Eocene of North America and Europe. Frame is 820mm wide

Background imageUngulate Collection: Equus caballus, horse

Equus caballus, horse
Skull belonging to a horse (Equus caballus) from the Zoology collections of the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageUngulate Collection: Arsinotherium skeleton

Arsinotherium skeleton
Mounted skeleton of an Oligocene, 35 million year old rhinoceras-like ungulate from Egypt. Complete mounted skeleton

Background imageUngulate Collection: Antler baton (Goughs Cave)

Antler baton (Goughs Cave)
Reindeer antler baton excavated from Goughs Cave, Cheddar, Somerset dated at around 14, 000 to 12, 000 years old, (Creswellian)

Background imageUngulate Collection: Tetracerus quadricornis, four-horned antelope jaw

Tetracerus quadricornis, four-horned antelope jaw
Tetracerus quadricornis, four-horned antelope. Jaw specimen taken from the collection at the Natural History Museum. Specimen ref is 56.9.22.11

Background imageUngulate Collection: Coelodonta antiquitatis, woolly rhinoceros

Coelodonta antiquitatis, woolly rhinoceros
Fossil horn specimen from the extinct woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis)

Background imageUngulate Collection: Pantholops hodgsonii (Tibetan antelope or chiru)

Pantholops hodgsonii (Tibetan antelope or chiru). View of skull BM(NH) 1843.1 12.100

Background imageUngulate Collection: A Race For Life

A Race For Life
Plate 12 taken from The Life and Habits of Wild Animals, illustrated by designs by Joseph Wolf, London 1874

Background imageUngulate Collection: Woolly rhinoceros skull

Woolly rhinoceros skull

Background imageUngulate Collection: The Barometz or Sythian Lamb

The Barometz or Sythian Lamb
From The Vegetable Lamb of Tartary 1887, by Henry Lee. Fig. 2 after Claude Duret

Background imageUngulate Collection: Great paleotherium

Great paleotherium
Drawing by Alfred Waterhouse for the ornamentation of the Natural History Museum, London, 1875-1876. Waterhouse designed the museum in the 1860s, and it first opened its doors on Easter Monday 1881

Background imageUngulate Collection: Goat design

Goat design
Drawing by Alfred Waterhouse for the ornamentation of the Natural History Museum, London, 1875-1876. Waterhouse designed the museum in the 1860s, and it first opened its doors on Easter Monday 1881

Background imageUngulate Collection: Capra ibex, alpine ibex

Capra ibex, alpine ibex. Composite shot of the skull of the Capra ibex, alpine ibex

Background imageUngulate Collection: Capra ibex, alpine ibex skull

Capra ibex, alpine ibex skull
Capra ibex, alpine ibex. Composite shot of the skull of the Capra ibex, alpine ibex

Background imageUngulate Collection: Tetracerus quadricornis, four-horned antelope

Tetracerus quadricornis, four-horned antelope. Skull specimens from the Natural History Museums mammal collection. Specimen reference is 2.8.14.3

Background imageUngulate Collection: Myotragus

Myotragus
This animal which lived around 6000 years ago was from the antelope group. Its remains have been found in the Balearic islands

Background imageUngulate Collection: Tooth of Hippopotamus amphibius

Tooth of Hippopotamus amphibius

Background imageUngulate Collection: Three unicorns

Three unicorns
Monoceros Unicornu and Caprinonq Marinq. Tab 10 from Beschriving Van de Natuur der Vier-voetige Dieren, 1660 by I. Johnston

Background imageUngulate Collection: Diceros bicornis, horn of a black rhinoceros

Diceros bicornis, horn of a black rhinoceros
A photograph of a black rhinoceros horn specimen from the collections of the Natural History Museum, London



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