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LLM5995644 Diagram of a cycad. Illustration for The World in the Past by B Webster Smith (2nd edn, Frederick Warne, 1931).
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AMO118615
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NHM1452598 Cycadeoidea marylandica, fossil cycad, 144-149 million year old specimen of a cycad from the Early Cretaceous, Maryland, USA. - Cretaceous Maryland USA
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LLM967880 Living Cycad (Cycas circinalis) of the Malabar Coast. Illustration for Our Earth and Its Story edited by Robert Brown (Cassell, c 1890). Digitally cleaned image.
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NHM1460057 Cretaceous landscape, Around 70 million years ago during the Cretaceous period flowering trees and shrubs similar to beeches and hickory grew alongside cycads, conifers and ferns. An illustration by Sally Dray. - Art and illustration
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NHM1454933 Zamites gigas, Jurassic leaves of the extinct cycad like bennettitalean gymnosperm from York, England. Specimen held at the Natural History Museum, London. - BennettitaleanLondon UK
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UIG806138
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UIG806137
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HFE4456210 Encephalartos ferox/Cycas/Zululand Cycad
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UIG803085
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UIG806139
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HFE4456214 Encephalartos hildebrandtii/Hildebrandt Cycas/Hildebrandt's Cycad
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UIG804384
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NHM1454932 Cycadeoidea microphylla, Jurassic extinct bennettitalean cycad like plant from Isle of Portland, Dorset, England. Specimen held at the Natural History Museum, London. - BennettitaleanLondon UK
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UIG804391
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UIG804390
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HFE4456212 Encephalartos lehmannii/Cycas de Lehmann/Karoo Cycad
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NHM1451963 Cycas angulata, cycad, Plate 159 from Botanical Drawings from Australia (1801) by Ferdinand L Bauer (1760-1826). - AustraliaLondon UK
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UIG804395
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RBG9032476 The current accepted plant name in the artwork is Cycas circinalis.Painting by Marianne North (1830-1890)
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RBG9032752 The current accepted plant name in the artwork is Macrozamia spiralis.Painting by Marianne North (1830-1890)
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NSW5670311 Lewin became the first professional artist of the British colony of New South Wales, Australia, from 1800.Illustration from Botanical Sketches of Australian Plants, 1803-06.Dimensions:38-38.5 x 25-28 cm approx.
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FLO5324537 Sago palm, king sago, sago cycad or Japanese sago palm, Cycas revoluta, Cycas. Handcoloured steel engraving by Lagesse after a botanical illustration by Edouard Maubert from Pierre Oscar Reveil, A. Dupuis, Fr. Gerard and Francois Herincq's La Regne Vegetal: Flore Medicale, L. Guerin, Paris, 1864-1871.
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FLO4662840 Encephalartos cycadifolius, Frederici Guilielmi variety. Chromolithograph by P. de Pannemaeker from Jean Linden's l'Illustration Horticole, Brussels, 1882.
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PIX4662618 Caudipteryx amidst Williamsonia - Caudipteryx is a genus of theropod dinosaur in the oviraptorosaur family. Maybe Caudipteryx was omnivorous. He lived 100 to 130 million years ago. It was two metres long, 60 centimetres high and a weight of 15 kilograms. It is considered an oviraptoride because of its edent beak and feathers. Peacock-sized theropod dinosaurs of the genus Caudipteryx wander a landscape dominated by cycad-like seed plants of the genus Williamsonia 125 million years ago in what is today China. Caudipteryx was a maniraptoran with a combination of reptile and bird-like features, including soft downy feathers that covered its body and a broad feathered tail. It could not fly, but was probably a swift runner
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PIX4662900 Psittacosaurus and pond - The psittacosaur (Psittacosaurus) is a ceratopsian dinosaur from the early Cretace that lived in Asia about 130 to 100 million years ago. A Jurassic Psittacosaurus prepares to dine on a scrubland cycad 130 million years ago in what is today central Asia. Psittacosaurus was one of the earliest known ceratopsians, a family of horned, frilled dinosaurs that includes the better known Triceratops. Psittacosaurus was about 3 to 6 feet long and weighed 50 to 175 pounds, depending on species. At least one species had long, quill-like structures on its tail and lower back. With a parrot-like beak it is believed that Psittacosaurus was a plant-eater
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PIX4661737 Lycaenops - Lycaenops is a genus of Gorgonopsian, that is, a therapside (mammalian reptile) that lived 270 million years ago, during the second part of Permian. Its name comes from the Greek and means “wolf face”. It was about 1 metre long. A three-foot-long, 35 pound carnivorous therapsid (mammal-like reptile) of the genus Lycaenops wanders a mountainous Mid-Permian landscape 270 million years ago in what is today South Africa. Vegetation includes various ferns forming ground cover and a large cycad. While reptilian in origin, Lycaenops more resembled a modern wolf with a long and slender skull, wolf-like fangs, and long legs held close to its body which probably enabled it to out-run the small reptiles and dicynodonts it dined on
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PIX4661896 Pterosaurs - Pterosaurs amidst Bjuvia - A Pterosaur approaches an appetizing carcass 228 million years ago. A pterosaur alights near the bank of a shallow pond, attracted by the prospect of a tasty dinner of carrion. 228 million years ago the Earth's open and sunny plains were home to a type of cycad known as Bjuvia simplex. Bjuvia, a cone-bearing seed plant, resembled modern palms, however they were more closely related to pines. Adult Bjuvia grew to a height of 25 feet and became extinct about 210 million years ago during the late Triassic period. Also during this time the skies were home to a flying variety of reptiles known as pterosaurs. While pterosaurs' reptilian origins appear clear, they were not related to birds, and it isn't certain whether they were even related to dinosaurs. There were many varieties of pterosaur during their reign of 160 million years, becoming extinct, along with most of the dinosaurs, about 65 million years ago
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FLO4609024 Coontie, Zamia pumila var. male. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by Weddell from Samuel Curtis' Botanical Magazine, London, 1818.
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Total de Resultados: 29

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