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Images Dated 17th April 2013 (page 44)

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Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Quiscalus major, boat-tailed grackle

Quiscalus major, boat-tailed grackle
Plate 187 from John James Audubons Birds of America, original double elephant folio (1831-34), hand-coloured aquatint. Engraved, printed and coloured by R. Havell (& Son), London

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Tringa nebularia, common greenshank

Tringa nebularia, common greenshank

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Triceratops

Triceratops
An animated model of the dinosaur Triceratops created by Kokoro of Japan for the Natural History Museum, London (3/4 scale)

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Proceratosaurus fossil skull

Proceratosaurus fossil skull
A fossil skull that belonged to Proceratosaurus, a carnivorous, dinosaur from the suborder of Theropods that lived during the Middle Jurassic period around 169 - 164 mya

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Marine coral

Marine coral

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Psaronius, tree fern

Psaronius, tree fern
Polished section through the trunk of the tree fern Psaronius, width approximately 15 cm, from Chemnitz, Garmany, dating back to the Permian period, 250 - 299 million years ago

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Psittacosaurus

Psittacosaurus
This dinosaur, also known as Protiguanodon has been found in several parts of Asia dating back to the Lower Cretaceous period around 100 million years ago

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: The Natural History Museum, London

The Natural History Museum, London
Floodlit view of the Natural History Museums Waterhouse Building from the east. Designed by Alfred Waterhouse (1830-1905) and opened to the public on Easter Monday 1881

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Title page from Carl Linnaeuss Systema Naturae (1758)

Title page from Carl Linnaeuss Systema Naturae (1758)
A compendium and classification of the natural world published by Carl Linnaeus. Volume 1, 10th Edition, published 1758

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Garnetiferous schist

Garnetiferous schist
Schist is a metamorphic rock, and this specimen show large formations of the gemstone garnet

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: 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 imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Pemmatites, lithistid sponge

Pemmatites, lithistid sponge
This sponge originates from the Permian rocks of the Artic island of Spitzbergen

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Scheelite

Scheelite
Crystals of scheelite (calcium tungstate), an important ore of tungsten from the collections of the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Vireo griseus, white-eyed vireo

Vireo griseus, white-eyed vireo
Plate 63 from John James Audubons Birds of America, original double elephant folio (1827-30), hand-coloured aquatint. Engraved, printed and coloured by R. Havell (& Son), London

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Dendroica coronata, yellow-rumped warbler

Dendroica coronata, yellow-rumped warbler
Plate 153 from John James Audubons Birds of America, original double elephant folio (1831-34), hand-coloured aquatint. Engraved, printed and coloured by R. Havell (& Son), London

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Scolopax minor, American woodcock

Scolopax minor, American woodcock

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Iguanodon model, 1990s

Iguanodon model, 1990s
Studies show that the weight of Iguanodons body was counterbalanced by the heavy tail and that it was able to move on two or four legs. They lived between 140 and 110 million years ago

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Sagittarius serpentarius, secretary bird

Sagittarius serpentarius, secretary bird
Ff. 32. Watercolour painting by George Forster annotated Falco sagittarius, serpantarius and made during Captain James Cooks second voyage to explore the southern continent (1772-75)

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Pseudocrinites magnificus, cystoid

Pseudocrinites magnificus, cystoid
This specimen is a rare fossil Cystoid. They belonged to the echinoderms and diversified greatly in the Silurian, but became extinct by the Permian

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Anthus spinoletta, water pipit

Anthus spinoletta, water pipit
Plate 10 from John James Audubons Birds of America, original double elephant folio (1827-30), hand-coloured aquatint. Engraved by W.H. Lizars, Edinburgh

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Dendroica caerulescens, black-throated blue warbler

Dendroica caerulescens, black-throated blue warbler
Plate 155 from John James Audubons Birds of America, original double elephant folio (1831-34), hand-coloured aquatint. Engraved, printed and coloured by R. Havell (& Son), London

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Phascolarctos cinereus, koala

Phascolarctos cinereus, koala
Plate 6 from a collection of 49 original watercolour drawings of animals by Ferdinand Lucas Bauer (1760-1826), from the H.M.S. Investigator expedition to Australia, 1801-1803

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Shells from Sir Joseph Banks collection

Shells from Sir Joseph Banks collection
Some of these shells featured in this museum drawer were collected during the first of Captain Cooks voyages 1768-1771

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Ankylosaur skin nodule

Ankylosaur skin nodule
This nodule would have been attached to the dinosaurs back by its flat base with the broad ridge providing protection. The Ankylosaurs were a family of dinosaurs characterised by thick bony plated

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Doleorthis, brachiopod

Doleorthis, brachiopod
Shown here is Doleorthis, a Silurian brachiopod. Brachiopods belong to their own phylum (Brachiopoda). General characteristics include a pair of protective shells

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Dinosaur footprint

Dinosaur footprint
Fossilised footprint of a dinosaur dating back to around 135 million years ago from a Purbeck Stone quarry near Swanage, Dorset, UK. Scientists believe that they may have belonged to the Iguanodon

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Eriocheir sinensis, Chinese mitten crab

Eriocheir sinensis, Chinese mitten crab
A detail of the Chinese mitten crab (Eriosheir sinensis) showing its eyes. This species of crab originates from the Far East but it is now evident that it has taken up residence in the River Thames

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Anas superciliosa, Pacific black duck

Anas superciliosa, Pacific black duck

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Leonaspis coronata, trilobite

Leonaspis coronata, trilobite
One of the smaller trilobites growing to a maximum length of 2cm. The spines have been well-preserved in this specimen

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Pan troglodytes, chimpanzee

Pan troglodytes, chimpanzee
Portrait of a chimpanzee. Photographed by Frank Greenaway

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Mounted tortoise specimen

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

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Heulandite

Heulandite crystal group on matrix, from Kilpatrick, Dumbartonshire. One of the group of Zeolites. Zeolites are microporous crystalline solids containing silicon, aluminium and oxygen

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Polacanthus skin impression

Polacanthus skin impression
Knobbly skin impression from the armoured dinosaur, Polacanthus. This dinosaur lived around 125 million years ago during the Lower Cretaceous. Its fossils have been found in the Isle of Wight, UK

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Cynognathus skull

Cynognathus skull
A fossil skull that belonged to the extinct mammal-like reptile, Cynognathus. It lived during the Triassic period, 245 to 208 million years ago. Typical length of entire creature 1.8 metres

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Elephas maximus, Asian elephant & Loxodonta africana, Africa

Elephas maximus, Asian elephant & Loxodonta africana, Africa
Asian elephant above noted as E. Indicus, African elephant below noted as E. Africanus. Plate 39, engraving from Edinburgh Journal Natural History Vol. 1, 1835-39

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Piranga rubra, summer tanager

Piranga rubra, summer tanager
Plate 44 from John James Audubons Birds of America, original double elephant folio (1827-30), hand-coloured aquatint. Engraved, printed and coloured by R. Havell (& Son), London

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins (1807-1889)

Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins (1807-1889)

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Larus delawarensis, ring-billed gull

Larus delawarensis, ring-billed gull
Plate 212 from John James Audubons Birds of America, original double elephant folio (1834-35), hand-coloured aquatint. Engraved, printed and coloured by R. Havell (& Son), London

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Progne subis, purple martin

Progne subis, purple martin

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Iridomyrmex geinitzi, ants in amber

Iridomyrmex geinitzi, ants in amber
This specimen is Baltic amber with ants trapped and preserved inside. Ants frequently got caught in the pine resins that were destined to become amber

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Feather detail

Feather detail
A scanning electron microscope (SEM) image of a birds feather

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Lord Lionel Walter Rothschild (1868-1937)

Lord Lionel Walter Rothschild (1868-1937)
Founder of the Natural History Museum at Tring, now part of the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Icterus galbula, Baltimore oriole

Icterus galbula, Baltimore oriole
Plate 12 from John James Audubons Birds of America, original double elephant folio (1827-30), hand-coloured aquatint. Engraved, printed and coloured by R. Havell (& Son), London

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Tyrannosaurus rex

Tyrannosaurus rex
A 3/4 scale animated model of the dinosaur Tyrannosaurus rex, created by Kokoro Ltd of Japan for the Natural History Museum, London. Tyrannosaurus lived between 67 and 65 million years ago

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Maiasaura with nest of eggs and hatchlings

Maiasaura with nest of eggs and hatchlings
An animated model of the dinosaur Miasaura, created by Kokoro Ltd. for the Natural History Museum, London. This dinosaur whose name meand good mother lizard lived during the Upper Cretaceous 60-85 mya

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Tanzanian leaf folding frog

Tanzanian leaf folding frog
The right hand of a Tanzanian leaf folding frog. The size of the toe discs can vary from specimen to specimen. These frogs were first discribed in 1928 but there has been no agreement on how many

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Shells on a sandy beach

Shells on a sandy beach
Washed up shells lying in tidal deposits on the sand

Background imageImages Dated 17th April 2013: Main entrance and Cromwell Road facade of the Natural Histor

Main entrance and Cromwell Road facade of the Natural Histor
The Natural History Museum was designed by Alfred Waterhouse (1830-1905) and opened to the public on Easter Monday 1881



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