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Edwin Henry Landseer, Head of 'Driver', a Deerhound Owned by the 5th Duke of Gordon (circa 1874)
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Carl Rungius (1869 – 1959). Lifted both fore feet together… Gouache on paper.
Coeur d’Alene Art Auction
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Barren ground caribou By: Leonard Lee Rue III From: Wild, Wild World of Animals: Wild Herds 1977
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Pica-pau-de-cabeça-amarela/Blond-crested Woodpecker
Celeus flavescens
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Cuban tree frog (Osteopilus septentrionalis) By: Constance P. Warner From: Living Amphibians of the World 1966
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Eland antelope By: M. Levy From: Wild, Wild World of Animals: Wild Herds 1977
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It's that time of the year again! I'm sorry? Nilgansitos Nilgansitos, get a quick snack and do hide under mum because it's too damn cold.
Nilgänse (Egyptian geese) am Eckensee im Oberen Schlossgarten, Stuttgart-Mitte.
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Hark | 30” x 17” | acrylic on panel
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Roe Deer/rådjur. Värmland, Sweden (January 24, 2019).
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Great argus pheasants By: Kenneth W. Fink From: Pheasants of the World 1993
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#MooseDay 🫎:
Goyce Kakegamic (Anishinaabe (Cree), 1948-2021)
#Moose, early 1980s
acrylic on paper, 18 x 24 in (45.7 x 61 cm)
“Moose, abundant in the dense forests of the Anishinaabe territories, serve as a crucial source of food for many Anishinaabeg. Moreover, various parts of the moose – its hide, fur, antlers, and more – are employed in the fabrication of drums, artistic creations, and an assortment of tools. Unsurprisingly, then, the moose is a frequent subject of the Anishinaabe painters of this time.”
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Zebu cattle in Chad By: Unknown photographer From: World Watch List for Domestic Animal Diversity 1995
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Marjorie Evans Goslee (USA, 1915-?)
Guinea, 1959
Stoneware, 29.1 x 16 cm (11 7/16 x 6 5/16 in.)
Cleveland Museum of Art 1959.149
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Absolute unit of a robber fly found by eldoia87 on Reddit (posted with permission)
This beauty is a Beelzebub bee-eater, Mallophora leschenaulti
Found primarily in Texas and Mexico
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Natural History in Zoological Gardens, by Frank E. Beddard. Illustration by Winifred Austen. 1905.
Internet Archive
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Anteater figure, 1975-77 Warao artist, El Pajal, Venezuela Carved Balsa wood with inlaid seeds 38.2 x 13.4 x 6.2 cm Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian 26/7561
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Arctic wolf searching for food on broken pack ice By: Jim Brandenburg From: Natural History Magazine 1989
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