799 pictures found
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Skull of the largest Cretaceous ichthyosaur specimen discovered to date. Aptian. Provence, France. 2m. Luc Ebbo collection. Paleogalerie, Salignac.
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
Skull of the largest Cretaceous ichthyosaur specimen discovered to date. Aptian. Provence, France. 2m. Luc Ebbo collection. Paleogalerie, Salignac. Ebbo collection
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Skull of the largest Cretaceous ichthyosaur specimen discovered to date. Aptian. Provence, France. 2m. Luc Ebbo collection. Paleogalerie, Salignac. Ebbo collection
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
Skull of the largest Cretaceous ichthyosaur specimen discovered to date. Aptian. Provence, France. 2m. Luc Ebbo collection. Paleogalerie, Salignac. Ebbo collection
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Skull and mandible of Icthyosaur (sveltonectes sp) from the Aptian of Provence 70 cm. Luc Ebbo collection. Paleogalerie, Salignac. Ebbo collection
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
Skull and mandible of Icthyosaur (sveltonectes sp) from the Aptian of Provence 70 cm. Luc Ebbo collection. Paleogalerie, Salignac. Ebbo collection
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Skull and mandible of a specimen of a crocodilian from the Metriorhynchidae family crossed by a calcite fault
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
Skull and mandible of a specimen of a crocodilian from the Metriorhynchidae family crossed by a calcite fault which shifted and deformed certain parts including the teeth. Luc Ebbo collection. Paleogalerie, Salignac. Ebbo collection
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Current swordfish skull. 1m long. - Blouet brothers collection
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
Current swordfish skull. 1m long. - Blouet brothers collection
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Ichthyosaur. Eurhinosaurus longirostris. Toarcian (180 million years). Lorraine. Skull originally crushed by sediment compaction and trapped in rock. To obtain this 3D
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
Ichthyosaur. Eurhinosaurus longirostris. Toarcian (180 million years). Lorraine. Skull originally crushed by sediment compaction and trapped in rock. To obtain this 3D hollowed-out skull, each bone is prepared one by one, then the skull is reassembled in 3D. This skull is the only specimen in the world of Eurhinosaurus present in 3D outside its rocky matrix. 1,2m long.- Blouet brothers collection
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Ichthyosaur. Stenopterygius sp. Toarcian (180 million years). Germany. Skull 40 cm long- Blouet brothers collection
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
Ichthyosaur. Stenopterygius sp. Toarcian (180 million years). Germany. Skull 40 cm long- Blouet brothers collection
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Ichthyosaur. Possibly Stenopterygius sp. Toarcian (180 million years). Lorraine. Skull originally crushed by sediment compaction, and trapped in
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
Ichthyosaur. Possibly Stenopterygius sp. Toarcian (180 million years). Lorraine. Skull originally crushed by sediment compaction, and trapped in rock. To obtain this 3D hollowed-out skull, each bone is prepared one by one, then the skull is reassembled in 3D. 50 cm de long.- Blouet brothers collection
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Mastodonsaurus. Middle Triassic (Å330 million years). Germany. Giant amphibian up to 5 meters long. -
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
Mastodonsaurus. Middle Triassic (Å330 million years). Germany. Giant amphibian up to 5 meters long. - Blouet brothers collection
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New yet undescribed giant ichthyosaur species from the Lower Cretaceous, Aptian (113-125 million years ago). The largest ichthyosaur skeleton in the
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
New yet undescribed giant ichthyosaur species from the Lower Cretaceous, Aptian (113-125 million years ago). The largest ichthyosaur skeleton in the world reassembled in 3 dimensions. As their name suggests, from the Greek 'ichthyo': fish, and 'saurus': reptile, ichthyhyosaurs were marine reptiles, which dominated the seas at the time when their dinosaur cousins occupied the mainland. This skeleton was discovered in Cretaceous rocks in Provence. - Blouet brothers collection
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New yet undescribed giant ichthyosaur species from the Lower Cretaceous, Aptian (113-125 million years ago). The largest ichthyosaur
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
New yet undescribed giant ichthyosaur species from the Lower Cretaceous, Aptian (113-125 million years ago). The largest ichthyosaur skeleton in the world reassembled in 3 dimensions. As their name suggests, from the Greek 'ichthyo': fish, and 'saurus': reptile, ichthyhyosaurs were marine reptiles, which dominated the seas at the time when their dinosaur cousins occupied the mainland. This skeleton was discovered in Cretaceous rocks in Provence.- Blouet brothers collection
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New yet undescribed giant ichthyosaur species from the Lower Cretaceous, Aptian (113-125 million years ago). The largest
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
© Pascal Goetgheluck / Biosphoto
New yet undescribed giant ichthyosaur species from the Lower Cretaceous, Aptian (113-125 million years ago). The largest ichthyosaur skeleton in the world reassembled in 3 dimensions. As their name suggests, from the Greek 'ichthyo': fish, and 'saurus': reptile, ichthyhyosaurs were marine reptiles, which dominated the seas at the time when their dinosaur cousins occupied the mainland. This skeleton was discovered in Cretaceous rocks in Provence. - Blouet brothers collection
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Lion (Panthera leo), cubs playing on the skull of a buffalo, Hwange NP, Zimbabwe
© Pierre Vernay / Biosphoto
© Pierre Vernay / Biosphoto
Lion (Panthera leo), cubs playing on the skull of a buffalo, Hwange NP, Zimbabwe
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School bus at the entrance of the park. The government is encouraging pupils to discover fauna in order to better protect it. Maasai Mara national
© Antoine Lorgnier / Biosphoto
© Antoine Lorgnier / Biosphoto
School bus at the entrance of the park. The government is encouraging pupils to discover fauna in order to better protect it. Maasai Mara national park. Kenya.
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Skull of a cave bear and of a European brown bear (Ursus arctos), Krizna Jama Cave, Cross Cave, Grahovo, Slovenia.
© Sergio Pitamitz / Biosphoto
© Sergio Pitamitz / Biosphoto
Skull of a cave bear and of a European brown bear (Ursus arctos), Krizna Jama Cave, Cross Cave, Grahovo, Slovenia.
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Skull of a cave bear and of a European brown bear (Ursus arctos), Krizna Jama Cave, Cross Cave, Grahovo, Slovenia.
© Sergio Pitamitz / Biosphoto
© Sergio Pitamitz / Biosphoto
Skull of a cave bear and of a European brown bear (Ursus arctos), Krizna Jama Cave, Cross Cave, Grahovo, Slovenia.
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Ch’ullpa Sepulchre, Funeray tower, Señoríos de los Lipes culture (1200-1450), the bodies were deposited in crevices of the volcanic tufa,
© Daniel Heuclin / Biosphoto
© Daniel Heuclin / Biosphoto
Ch’ullpa Sepulchre, Funeray tower, Señoríos de los Lipes culture (1200-1450), the bodies were deposited in crevices of the volcanic tufa, Necopolis, San Juan del Rosario, Bolivia
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Ch’ullpa Sepulchre, Funeray tower, Señoríos de los Lipes culture (1200-1450), the bodies were deposited in crevices of the volcanic tufa,
© Daniel Heuclin / Biosphoto
© Daniel Heuclin / Biosphoto
Ch’ullpa Sepulchre, Funeray tower, Señoríos de los Lipes culture (1200-1450), the bodies were deposited in crevices of the volcanic tufa, Necopolis, San Juan del Rosario, Bolivia
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Ch’ullpa Sepulchre, Funeray tower, Señoríos de los Lipes culture (1200-1450), the bodies were deposited in crevices of the volcanic tufa,
© Daniel Heuclin / Biosphoto
© Daniel Heuclin / Biosphoto
Ch’ullpa Sepulchre, Funeray tower, Señoríos de los Lipes culture (1200-1450), the bodies were deposited in crevices of the volcanic tufa, Necopolis, San Juan del Rosario, Bolivia
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Ch’ullpa Sepulchre, Funeray tower, Señoríos de los Lipes culture
© Daniel Heuclin / Biosphoto
© Daniel Heuclin / Biosphoto
Ch’ullpa Sepulchre, Funeray tower, Señoríos de los Lipes culture (1200-1450), the bodies were deposited in crevices of the volcanic tufa, Necopolis, San Juan del Rosario, Bolivia
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Ch’ullpa Sepulchre, Funeray tower, Señoríos de los Lipes culture
© Daniel Heuclin / Biosphoto
© Daniel Heuclin / Biosphoto
Ch’ullpa Sepulchre, Funeray tower, Señoríos de los Lipes culture (1200-1450), the bodies were deposited in crevices of the volcanic tufa, Necopolis, San Juan del Rosario, Bolivia
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A hippopotamus skeleton lying in the Maasai Mara plains. Masai Mara National Reserve, Kenya.
© Sergio Pitamitz / Biosphoto
© Sergio Pitamitz / Biosphoto
A hippopotamus skeleton lying in the Maasai Mara plains. Masai Mara National Reserve, Kenya.
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Gray whale (Eschrichtius robustus) Gray whale skeleton Isla Sta
© Christopher Swann / Biosphoto
© Christopher Swann / Biosphoto
Gray whale (Eschrichtius robustus) Gray whale skeleton Isla Sta Magrgarita BCS Mexico
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Bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) Bahia de La Paz BCS Mexico.
© Christopher Swann / Biosphoto
© Christopher Swann / Biosphoto
Bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) Bahia de La Paz BCS Mexico.
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Valley with head skeleton of Siberian ibex (Capra sibirica), Altai mountains, West Mongolia, Mongolia
© Sylvain Cordier / Biosphoto
© Sylvain Cordier / Biosphoto
Valley with head skeleton of Siberian ibex (Capra sibirica), Altai mountains, West Mongolia, Mongolia
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Valley with head skeleton of Siberian ibex (Capra sibirica), Altai mountains, West Mongolia, Mongolia
© Sylvain Cordier / Biosphoto
© Sylvain Cordier / Biosphoto
Valley with head skeleton of Siberian ibex (Capra sibirica), Altai mountains, West Mongolia, Mongolia
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Skulls of the Carmelite Chapel, Carmelite Church of Faro (XVIII):
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
Skulls of the Carmelite Chapel, Carmelite Church of Faro (XVIII): Walls and ceiling entirely built with skulls and bones (femurs) human, about 1200 skeletons of monks, Algarve, Portugal
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Skulls of the Carmelite Chapel, Carmelite Church of Faro (XVIII): Walls and ceiling entirely built with skulls and bones (femurs) human, about 1200
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
Skulls of the Carmelite Chapel, Carmelite Church of Faro (XVIII): Walls and ceiling entirely built with skulls and bones (femurs) human, about 1200 skeletons of monks, Algarve, Portugal
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Skulls of the Carmelite Chapel, Carmelite Church of Faro (XVIII): Walls and ceiling entirely built with skulls and bones (femurs) human, about 1200
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
Skulls of the Carmelite Chapel, Carmelite Church of Faro (XVIII): Walls and ceiling entirely built with skulls and bones (femurs) human, about 1200 skeletons of monks, Algarve, Portugal
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Skulls of the Carmelite Chapel, Carmelite Church of Faro (XVIII): Walls and ceiling entirely built with skulls and bones (femurs) human, about 1200
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
Skulls of the Carmelite Chapel, Carmelite Church of Faro (XVIII): Walls and ceiling entirely built with skulls and bones (femurs) human, about 1200 skeletons of monks, Algarve, Portugal
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Skulls of the Carmelite Chapel, Carmelite Church of Faro (XVIII):
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
© Jean-Philippe Delobelle / Biosphoto
Skulls of the Carmelite Chapel, Carmelite Church of Faro (XVIII): Walls and ceiling entirely built with skulls and bones (femurs) human, about 1200 skeletons of monks, Algarve, Portugal
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Turtle shell (carapace) skeleton on the beach at Magdalena Island, Magdalena Bay, West Coast of Baja California, Pacific Ocean, Mexico
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Turtle shell (carapace) skeleton on the beach at Magdalena Island, Magdalena Bay, West Coast of Baja California, Pacific Ocean, Mexico
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A stylised bird skeleton 1. Skull, 2. Cervical vertebrae, 3. Furcula, 4.
© Biodidac / mario modesto / Lilian Gibert / Biosphoto
© Biodidac / mario modesto / Lilian Gibert / Biosphoto
A stylised bird skeleton 1. Skull, 2. Cervical vertebrae, 3. Furcula, 4. Coracoid, 5. Uncinate process, 6. Keel, 7. Patella, 8. Tarsometatarsus, 9. Digits, 10. Tibiotarsus (10 and 11), 11. Tibiotarsus (10 and 11), 12. Femur, 13. Pubis (innominate bone), 14. Ischium (innominate bone), 15. Illium (innominate bone), 16. Caudal vertebrae, 17. Pygostyle, 18. Synsacrum, 19. Scapula, 20. Lumbar vertebrae, 21. Humerus, 22. Ulna, 23. Radius, 24. Carpus, 25. Metacarpus, 26. Digits, 27. Alula.
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Yellow-flowered Skull-cap (Scutellaria orientalis) flowers, Armenia
© Michel Gunther / Biosphoto
© Michel Gunther / Biosphoto
Yellow-flowered Skull-cap (Scutellaria orientalis) flowers, Armenia
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African bush elephant or African savanna elephant (Loxodonta africana), skeleton of a dead elephant, Moremi National Park, Bostwana,
© Sylvain Cordier / Biosphoto
© Sylvain Cordier / Biosphoto
African bush elephant or African savanna elephant (Loxodonta africana), skeleton of a dead elephant, Moremi National Park, Bostwana,
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Narwhal skulls (Monodon monoceros) hunted by Inuit with 2 teeth, rare -
© Raphaël Sané / Biosphoto
© Raphaël Sané / Biosphoto
Narwhal skulls (Monodon monoceros) hunted by Inuit with 2 teeth, rare - but regular - in males, Greenland
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Badger (Meles meles) skull at the entrance of the set, England
© Frédéric Desmette / Biosphoto
© Frédéric Desmette / Biosphoto
Badger (Meles meles) skull at the entrance of the set, England
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Concept image alluding to death caused by plastic garbage drifting in the oceans. Toy representing a skull in the middle of various plastic garbage
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
Concept image alluding to death caused by plastic garbage drifting in the oceans. Toy representing a skull in the middle of various plastic garbage floating in the ocean. A young Streaked spinefoot (Siganus javus), is eating the algae that grows on the skull surface. Kuwait, Persian Gulf. Composite image
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Concept image alluding to death caused by plastic garbage drifting in the oceans. Toy representing a skull in the middle of various plastic garbage
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
Concept image alluding to death caused by plastic garbage drifting in the oceans. Toy representing a skull in the middle of various plastic garbage floating in the ocean.. Kuwait, Persian Gulf
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Skull of Brown bear (Usrus arctos) on display in Krizna jama, cave where remains of over 100 Cave bears (Ursus ingressus) have been found, Bloška
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Skull of Brown bear (Usrus arctos) on display in Krizna jama, cave where remains of over 100 Cave bears (Ursus ingressus) have been found, Bloška polica, Slovenia
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Red piranha, Pygocentrus nattereri. Two images overlap: one from
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
© Paulo de Oliveira / Biosphoto
Red piranha, Pygocentrus nattereri. Two images overlap: one from live fish head and another from clean skull. Note dentition. Portugal. Composite image
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Wild boar (Sus scrofa) skull on the edge of a river, Ardennes, Belgium
© Philippe Moës / Biosphoto
© Philippe Moës / Biosphoto
Wild boar (Sus scrofa) skull on the edge of a river, Ardennes, Belgium
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Whale's bones, Puerto Piramides, Golfo Nuevo, Peninsula Valdes, Chubut, Patagonia, Argentina, Atlantic Ocean
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
© Franco Banfi / Biosphoto
Whale's bones, Puerto Piramides, Golfo Nuevo, Peninsula Valdes, Chubut, Patagonia, Argentina, Atlantic Ocean