Wellcome uses cookies.

Read our policy
Skip to main content
116 results
  • Mammals with congenital defects. Lithograph.
  • Mammals with congenital defects, missing and elongated limbs. Lithograph.
  • Illustrations of skulls of mammals
  • Africa: indigenous plants and mammals of Ethiopia. Engraving, 1682.
  • Calves and other mammals with congenital defects to the spine. Lithograph.
  • A selection of named rodents, marsupials and small carnivorous mammals. Etching.
  • Africa: indigenous plants and mammals of Ethiopia, including elephants and hippopotami. Engraving.
  • Eight animals of the order Primates, the highest order of mammals. Line engraving.
  • Thirteen different mammals ranging from apes, rodents and marsupials to a whale. Coloured lithograph.
  • A table with 25 different mammals. Engraving by R. Scott after Captain T. Brown.
  • Six nocturnal mammals of the order Chiroptera. Line engraving by Milton after S. Edwards.
  • A table with 47 different mammals. Engraving by R. Scott after Captain T. Brown.
  • Five four-footed mammals, including manis and armadillos. Line engraving by J. Scott after S. Edwards.
  • Pathology in fossil mammals b) right radius of Daphaenus Felinus, a large dog from Oligocene of Nebraska.
  • Six four-footed mammals, including sloths and ant eater. Line engraving by J. Scott after S. Edwards.
  • Fossil teeth of mammals: hippopotamus, rhinoceros, tapir, Palaeotherium medium, Anoplotherium, Megalonyx (tooth and claw). Coloured etching by S. Springsguth, 1833.
  • Lactol with added vitamin "D" : the ideal food for puppies and other young mammals / A.F. Sherley & Co. Ltd.
  • Lactol with added vitamin "D" : the ideal food for puppies and other young mammals / A.F. Sherley & Co. Ltd.
  • Ten viverrid mammals of the family Viverridae, including civets, mongooses and genets. Coloured etching by J. Miller after Captain T. Brown.
  • Coasts in the Indian Ocean, including Adam's Peak and Bantam, and two sea-mammals found in the ocean. Etching by B. M.
  • Four four-footed mammals of the order Ferae shown in their natural habitat. Line engraving by S. Edwards after J. Scott, 1810.
  • Circulatory systems: seven diagrams, indicating the heart and circulatory systems of mammals, birds, reptiles, lobsters, fish and arachnids. Watercolour drawing by J.C. Whishaw, 1852/1854.
  • Six amphibious arctic mammals, including a walrus, a sea lion and a seal, shown in their natural habitat. Line engraving by J. Scott after S. Edwards.
  • Vitamin C, also known as a ascorbic acid, is a water-soluble vitamin, which means it is excreated by the body and needs to be replaced in our diet. Unlike most mammals, humans do not have the ability to make their own vitamin C. Vitamin C deficiency can lead to scurvy.
  • Haeckel's Evolution of Man. This plate shows the embryos of four mammals in the three corresponding stages: of a Hog (H), Calf (C), Rabbit (R), and a Man (M). The conditions of the three different stages of development, which the three crossroads (I,II,III) represent, are selected to correspond as exactly as possible.
  • The idealized skull of a mammal.
  • Comparaison of primitive reptile and primitive mammal
  • Skeleton of a mammal. Lithograph after J. Dinkel.
  • Showing the development of the foetal membranes of a mammal
  • Traumatic Lesions in Dinosaur and in a mammal (a, b, c & d)