AMNH 14214, collected by A.J. Thompson and H.C. Cook, 1908, 2 miles east of Agate, Sioux County, NebraskaMiocene 20 MYAAMNH, NYC, NY (February 17, 2017)
A large bronze sculpture of a rhinoceros on a peak, with small birds sitting on its spine. Theodore Roosevelt's taxidermist James Clark cast this bronze in 1912. It was a gift to Theodore Roosevelt from his younger sister Corinne. Family lore is that Edith Roosevelt did not care for the bronze and hung her gardening hat on the horn. She also encouraged the Roosevelt children to post phone messages on the tick birds on the back of the rhinoceros. Keywords: Sculpture; Bronze; Rhinoceros; James L. Clark
The Ruta del Pleistoceno consists of an itinerary of murals in the localities of El Llano, El Beal and El Estrecho de San Ginés that represent the findings in the nearby Cueva Victoria. The project was promoted in 2017 by the Municipal Department of Historical and Archaeological Heritage of the City Council of Cartagena. The photograph shows a mural at the RM-F43 in El Estrecho de San Ginés, where caricatured specimens of Xenocyon lycaonoides, Stephanorhinus etruscus and Theropithecus oswaldi appear.
Summary[edit] Description: The taxidermied remains of the only Sumatran rhinoceros that lived in captivity (Copenhagen Zoo) by 1972, a female called "Subur", at the Zoological Museum in Copenhagen. Date: 2007. Source: Own work. Author: FunkMonk (Michael B. H.).
Summary[edit] Description: Italiano: Took the picture at Natural History Museum, Nurnberg. Date: 6 July 2017, 10:02:40. Source: Own work. Author: Ghedoghedo.
Summary[edit] Description: Italiano: Fossil of Mesaceratherium- Took the picture at Museum am Lowentor, Stuttgart. Date: 19 August 2015, 14:39:31. Source: Own work. Author: Ghedoghedo.
Summary[edit] Description: BLACK RHINO!!! One of the world most threatened animals. The Black rhino. We were very very lucky to see this animal. 15,000 world wide but only 12 in the whole of Ngorogoro. It went beyond our expectations by spraying urine in a very amusing fashion. Date: 15 August 2003, 00:00. Source: BLACK RHINO. Author: NeilsPhotography. Camera location3° 10′ 10.75″ S, 35° 38′ 48.69″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap -3.169654; 35.646858.
James St. John|sourceurl=https://flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/33492625686%7Carchive=https://web.archive.org/web/20190117053243/https://www.flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/33492625686/%7Creviewdate=2019-11-04 14:51:40|reviewlicense=cc-by-2.0|reviewer=FlickreviewR 2
Wikimedia Commons
Summary[edit] Description: Teleoceras fossiger Cope, 1878 - fossil rhinoceros skull from the Miocene of Kansas, USA. (CM 21700, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA) From museum signage: "This rhino's stumpy legs were more likely used to pole it along underwater rather than for walking on land. It was amphibious like today's hippopotamus, but Teleoceras had a prominent horn on its nose like the rhino." Classification: Animalia, Chordata, Vertebrata, Mammalia, Perissodactyla, Rhinocerotidae See info. at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teleoceras. Date: 25 July 2010, 16:09. Source: Teleoceras fossiger (fossil rhinoceros) (Miocene; Kansas, USA) 5. Author: James St. John.