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Dodo Collection

The Dodo (Allies Columbiformes) is an extinct flightless bird that was native to the island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean

Choose a picture from our Dodo Collection for your Wall Art and Photo Gifts

355 items

Background imageDodo Collection: Coloured Engraving of a dodo

Coloured Engraving of a dodo
Engraving of a dodo, an extinct, flightless bird, related to the pigeon. The size of a swan, it was heavily-built and clumsy

Background imageDodo Collection: Raphus cucullatus, dodo

Raphus cucullatus, dodo
Plate 1 from Memoirs on the Dodo by Sir Richard Owen, 1866

Background imageDodo Collection: Alice in Wonderland

Alice in Wonderland
Vintage colour lithograph of Alice and the Dodo, from Alices Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll, John Tenniel

Background imageDodo Collection: Carroll / Alice & the Dodo

Carroll / Alice & the Dodo
ALICE AND THE DODO

Background imageDodo Collection: Mauritian Dodo (Raphus cucullatus), compact bird with curved, brown bill and brown feet, side view

Mauritian Dodo (Raphus cucullatus), compact bird with curved, brown bill and brown feet, side view

Background imageDodo Collection: Raphus cucullatus, dodo

Raphus cucullatus, dodo
A mounted specimen of the extinct flightless bird, the dodo (Raphus cucullatus). The dodo lived on the island of Mauritius and became extinct during the late 1600s

Background imageDodo Collection: Raphus solitarius, Reunion white dodo

Raphus solitarius, Reunion white dodo
Plate 25 from Extinct and Vanishing Birds of the World (1907) by Lord Lionel Walter Rothschild

Background imageDodo Collection: Dodo (Buffon)

Dodo (Buffon)
The dodo, in profile

Background imageDodo Collection: Alice and the Dodo

Alice and the Dodo -- the Dodo solemnly presented the thimble saying, " We beg your acceptance of this elegant thimble"

Background imageDodo Collection: Animals / Extinct / Dodo

Animals / Extinct / Dodo
Animals/Extinct/Dodo

Background imageDodo Collection: Alice in Wonderland, Alice in the Pool of Tears

Alice in Wonderland, Alice in the Pool of Tears
Alice in Wonderland -- Alice swims with various birds and animals in the Pool of Tears. Date: early 20th century

Background imageDodo Collection: Dodo, Raphus cucullatus, Didus ineptus, extinct

Dodo, Raphus cucullatus, Didus ineptus, extinct flightless bird.. Handcolored copperplate zoological engraving from George Shaw and Frederick Nodders The Naturalists Miscellany, 1792

Background imageDodo Collection: Dodo, Didus ineptus or Raphus cucullatus

Dodo, Didus ineptus or Raphus cucullatus.. Colour printed (chromolithograph) illustration by F. John from Tiere der Urwelt Animals of the Prehistoric World, 1916, Hamburg

Background imageDodo Collection: Didus ineptus, dodo design

Didus ineptus, dodo design
Drawing 51 Vol 2 by Alfred Waterhouse for the ornamentation of the panel over doorway in the South East gallery, first floor of the Natural History Museum, London, 1875

Background imageDodo Collection: A group of Dodo birds crossing a natural bridge over a stream

A group of Dodo birds crossing a natural bridge over a stream

Background imageDodo Collection: Wood engraving of Roelandt Saverys painting of the dodo

Wood engraving of Roelandt Saverys painting of the dodo
Painting of the dodo and other ducks, macaws and rail drawn from life by Dutch artist Roelandt Savery. Presented to the British Museum by George Edwards, 1759

Background imageDodo Collection: Dodo, Raphus cucullatus

Dodo, Raphus cucullatus.. Handcolored copperplate engraving from The Naturalists Pocket Magazine, Harrison, London, 1800

Background imageDodo Collection: Dodo and guinea pig, 1750. Artist: George Edwards

Dodo and guinea pig, 1750. Artist: George Edwards
Dodo and guinea pig, 1750. A dodo - Didus ineptus, an extinct flightless bird from Mauritius and a guinea pig - Cavia porcellus, a rodent native to South America

Background imageDodo Collection: Illustration: Dodo- from Strickland 1848

Illustration: Dodo- from Strickland 1848
PM-9677 Illustration: Dodo - from Strickland 1848 Extinct Didus ineptus Mascarenes, Flightless birds Pat Morris Please note that prints are for personal display purposes only

Background imageDodo Collection: Skull, jaw and sclerotic bones of dodo

Skull, jaw and sclerotic bones of dodo
Back view of skull, upper and lower view of lower jaw, inner view of jaw, and circle of sclerotic bones in the dodo. Lithograph from Hugh Edwin Strickland and Alexander Gordon Melvilles The Dodo

Background imageDodo Collection: Upper and lower views of the skull of a dodo

Upper and lower views of the skull of a dodo. Lithograph from Hugh Edwin Strickland and Alexander Gordon Melvilles The Dodo and its Kindred, London, Reeve, Benham and Reeve, 1848

Background imageDodo Collection: Side view of the skull of a dodo

Side view of the skull of a dodo. Lithograph from Hugh Edwin Strickland and Alexander Gordon Melvilles The Dodo and its Kindred, London, Reeve, Benham and Reeve, 1848

Background imageDodo Collection: Television programme - Dr Who - Actress Jackie Lane who plays Dodo a companion of

Television programme - Dr Who - Actress Jackie Lane who plays Dodo a companion of the Doctor, in the long-running BBC science fiction television series Doctor Who 18 February 1966

Background imageDodo Collection: Dodo, Raphus cucullatus, extinct

Dodo, Raphus cucullatus, extinct.. Handcolored copperplate engraving from William Frederic Martyns New Dictionary of Natural History, Harrison, London, 1785

Background imageDodo Collection: Dodo - profile and rear studies

Dodo - profile and rear studies
Two studies of the Dodo (Raphus cucullatus) - a flightless bird endemic to the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius, extinct since the mid-to-late 17th century

Background imageDodo Collection: Raphus cucullatus, dodo

Raphus cucullatus, dodo
A mounted specimen of the extinct flightless bird, the dodo (Raphus cucullatus). The dodo lived on the island of Mauritius and became extinct during the late 1600s

Background imageDodo Collection: Animals / Extinct / Dodo

Animals / Extinct / Dodo
DODO EXTINCT BIRD

Background imageDodo Collection: Dodo skeleton, Raphus cucullatus

Dodo skeleton, Raphus cucullatus
The dodo is an icon of extinction, one of the first widely acknowledged cases of a species being wiped out by humans. There are so few complete dodo skeletons that we may never know exactly what they

Background imageDodo Collection: Dodo, Raphus cucullatus

Dodo, Raphus cucullatus.. Lithograph after an illustration by J. Smit from H. N. Hutchinsons Extinct Monsters and Creatures of Other Days, Chapman and Hall, London, 1894

Background imageDodo Collection: Raphus cucullatus, dodo

Raphus cucullatus, dodo
Plate 294, hand coloured copperplate etching from George Edwards The Gleanings of Natural History, Vol. 2 (1760)

Background imageDodo Collection: Animals / Extinct / Dodo

Animals / Extinct / Dodo
Animals/Extinct/Dodo

Background imageDodo Collection: Dodo, Raphus cucullatus, extinct flightless bird. Handcoloured copperplate engraving after an

Dodo, Raphus cucullatus, extinct flightless bird. Handcoloured copperplate engraving after an illustration by George
FLO4694425 Dodo, Raphus cucullatus, extinct flightless bird. Handcoloured copperplate engraving after an illustration by George Shaw from his Zoological Lectures, Delivered at the Royal Institution

Background imageDodo Collection: Metatarsus and toes of the dodo, Raphus cucullatus 1-5, foot of the yellow-footed green pigeon

Metatarsus and toes of the dodo, Raphus cucullatus 1-5, foot of the yellow-footed green pigeon, Treron chlorigaster 6
FLO4612178 Metatarsus and toes of the dodo, Raphus cucullatus 1-5, foot of the yellow-footed green pigeon, Treron chlorigaster 6, stock dove, Columba oenas 7 and partridge pigeon

Background imageDodo Collection: Side view of the skull of a dodo. Lithograph from Hugh Edwin Strickland

Side view of the skull of a dodo. Lithograph from Hugh Edwin Strickland and Alexander Gordon Melville's The Dodo
FLO4612152 Side view of the skull of a dodo. Lithograph from Hugh Edwin Strickland and Alexander Gordon Melville's The Dodo and its Kindred, London, Reeve, Benham and Reeve

Background imageDodo Collection: Willem Ysbrantsz Bontekoe's illustration of the dodo, from his Voyage, 1646

Willem Ysbrantsz Bontekoe's illustration of the dodo, from his Voyage, 1646
FLO4612144 Willem Ysbrantsz Bontekoe's illustration of the dodo, from his Voyage, 1646. Wood engraving from Hugh Edwin Strickland and Alexander Gordon Melville's The Dodo and its Kindred, London

Background imageDodo Collection: Painting of the dodo and other ducks, macaws and rail drawn from life by Dutch artist Roelandt

Painting of the dodo and other ducks, macaws and rail drawn from life by Dutch artist Roelandt Savery
FLO4612067 Painting of the dodo and other ducks, macaws and rail drawn from life by Dutch artist Roelandt Savery. Presented to the British Museum by George Edwards, 1759

Background imageDodo Collection: Title page with Willem Ysbrantsz Bontekoe's illustration of the dodo

Title page with Willem Ysbrantsz Bontekoe's illustration of the dodo. Title page from Hugh Edwin Strickland
FLO4612063 Title page with Willem Ysbrantsz Bontekoe's illustration of the dodo. Title page from Hugh Edwin Strickland and Alexander Gordon Melville's The Dodo and its Kindred, London, Reeve

Background imageDodo Collection: White dodo head by Cornelis Saftleven, male, 1637, after a painting in the Museum Boijmans of

White dodo head by Cornelis Saftleven, male, 1637, after a painting in the Museum Boijmans of Rotterdam (25)
FLO4612041 White dodo head by Cornelis Saftleven, male, 1637, after a painting in the Museum Boijmans of Rotterdam (25), and white dodo head by Jan Goeimare, male, 1853 (26)

Background imageDodo Collection: White dodo II by Pieter Holsteyn, female, 1638. Heliotype by Van Leer from Dr

White dodo II by Pieter Holsteyn, female, 1638. Heliotype by Van Leer from Dr
FLO4612015 White dodo II by Pieter Holsteyn, female, 1638. Heliotype by Van Leer from Dr. Anthonie Cornelis Oudemans' Dodo Studies, Amsterdam, Johannes Muller

Background imageDodo Collection: White dodo I by Pieter II Holsteyn, female, 1638. Heliotype by Van Leer from Dr

White dodo I by Pieter II Holsteyn, female, 1638. Heliotype by Van Leer from Dr
FLO4612010 White dodo I by Pieter II Holsteyn, female, 1638. Heliotype by Van Leer from Dr. Anthonie Cornelis Oudemans' Dodo Studies, Amsterdam, Johannes Muller

Background imageDodo Collection: Copies of the white dodo by Salomon Savery, male: Michiel de Groot, 1682 (17), Gijsbert de Groot

Copies of the white dodo by Salomon Savery, male: Michiel de Groot, 1682 (17), Gijsbert de Groot, 1724 (18)
FLO4612009 Copies of the white dodo by Salomon Savery, male: Michiel de Groot, 1682 (17), Gijsbert de Groot, 1724 (18), Isaak van der Putte, 1733 (19) and Jan Morterre, 1757 (20)

Background imageDodo Collection: Dodo, Raphus cucullatus (extinct), ostrich, Struthio camelus, great bustard

Dodo, Raphus cucullatus (extinct), ostrich, Struthio camelus, great bustard, Otis tarda (vulnerable), cassowary
FLO4684724 Dodo, Raphus cucullatus (extinct), ostrich, Struthio camelus, great bustard, Otis tarda (vulnerable), cassowary, Casuarius casuarius (vulnerable), and North Island brown kiwi

Background imageDodo Collection: Southern cassowary, Casuarius casuarius (vulnerable), and dodo, Raphus cucullatus (extinct)

Southern cassowary, Casuarius casuarius (vulnerable), and dodo, Raphus cucullatus (extinct)
FLO4727749 Southern cassowary, Casuarius casuarius (vulnerable), and dodo, Raphus cucullatus (extinct). Handcoloured lithograph by Bretzing from an illustration by Ludwig Meyer from Friedrich Philipp

Background imageDodo Collection: Hooded dodo, Raphus cucullatus, extinct flightless bird. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by

Hooded dodo, Raphus cucullatus, extinct flightless bird. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by John Pass after George
FLO4618710 Hooded dodo, Raphus cucullatus, extinct flightless bird. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by John Pass after George Edwards from John Wilkes' Encyclopedia Londinensis, London

Background imageDodo Collection: Side, front and back of the leg of a dodo in the British Museum. Illustration drawn

Side, front and back of the leg of a dodo in the British Museum. Illustration drawn
FLO4612128 Side, front and back of the leg of a dodo in the British Museum. Illustration drawn and lithographed by Joseph Dinkel from Hugh Edwin Strickland

Background imageDodo Collection: Humerus and femur of the extinct Rodrigues solitaire, Pezophaps solitaria

Humerus and femur of the extinct Rodrigues solitaire, Pezophaps solitaria
FLO4612190 Humerus and femur of the extinct Rodrigues solitaire, Pezophaps solitaria, in the Parisian Collection and Andersonian Collection

Background imageDodo Collection: Facsimile of Roelandt Savery's picture of the dodo in the Bellvedere at Vienna, 1628

Facsimile of Roelandt Savery's picture of the dodo in the Bellvedere at Vienna, 1628
FLO4612095 Facsimile of Roelandt Savery's picture of the dodo in the Bellvedere at Vienna, 1628. Handcoloured lithograph after Roelandt Savery from Hugh Edwin Strickland

Background imageDodo Collection: White dodo by Johann Walther, female, 1657 (27) and white dodo by Jacob Hoefnagel, young male

White dodo by Johann Walther, female, 1657 (27) and white dodo by Jacob Hoefnagel, young male, 1609 (28)
FLO4612042 White dodo by Johann Walther, female, 1657 (27) and white dodo by Jacob Hoefnagel, young male, 1609 (28). Heliotype by Van Leer from Dr



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Dodo Collection

The Dodo (Allies Columbiformes) is an extinct flightless bird that was native to the island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean. It was a large, bulky bird with a small head and short wings. It had greyish-brown feathers, a white belly, and yellow legs. Its diet consisted mainly of fruits and nuts. The Dodo became extinct due to hunting by humans and predation by introduced animals such as pigs and cats. Its extinction occurred sometime between 1690 and 1693 due to overhunting for food, destruction of its habitat, introduction of new predators, and disease brought by sailors from Europe. The Dodo is now an iconic symbol of human-caused extinction; it serves as a reminder that human activities can have devastating effects on species populations if not managed properly.
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Our beautiful pictures are available as Framed Prints, Photos, Wall Art and Photo Gifts

The Dodo collection from Media Storehouse features a range of stunning wall art, framed prints, photo prints, canvas prints, jigsaw puzzles and greeting cards that showcase the beauty and uniqueness of this extinct bird. The Dodo was a flightless bird that lived on the island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean until it became extinct in the late 17th century due to hunting by humans and habitat destruction. Despite its tragic fate, the Dodo has become an iconic symbol of extinction and conservation efforts. Our collection includes high-quality images of the Dodo captured by talented photographers and artists from around the world. These images are available in various sizes and formats to suit different preferences and decor styles. Whether you're looking for a statement piece for your living room or a thoughtful gift for someone who loves birds or nature, there's something for everyone in this unique collection.
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What are Dodo (Allies Columbiformes Birds Animals) art prints?

Dodo art prints are high-quality reproductions of artwork featuring the extinct bird species known as the dodo. These prints showcase various artistic styles and techniques, including watercolor, oil painting, and digital illustration. The dodo was a flightless bird that lived on the island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean until it became extinct in the late 17th century due to human activity such as hunting and habitat destruction. Despite its tragic demise, the dodo has become an iconic symbol of conservation efforts and serves as a reminder of humanity's impact on wildlife. Dodo art prints offer a unique way to appreciate this fascinating creature through beautiful artwork that captures its distinctive appearance and personality. Whether displayed in homes or offices, these prints are sure to spark conversation and inspire appreciation for our natural world.
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What Dodo (Allies Columbiformes Birds Animals) art prints can I buy from Media Storehouse?

We offer a wide range of Dodo art prints that are perfect for bird enthusiasts and collectors alike. These prints showcase the unique beauty and charm of these extinct birds, which were once native to Mauritius. You can choose from a variety of styles, including vintage illustrations, modern digital artwork, and photographs. Some popular options include detailed drawings by John Gould and Edward Lear, as well as colorful paintings by contemporary artists. You can also find prints featuring multiple dodos in various poses or settings. Whether you're looking for a statement piece for your home or office or simply want to add to your collection of avian art, we have something for everyone. With high-quality printing on premium paper stock, these Dodo art prints are sure to impress anyone who sees them.
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How do I buy Dodo (Allies Columbiformes Birds Animals) art prints?

To buy Dodo art prints from Media Storehouse, you can browse our extensive collection of artwork featuring these unique and fascinating creatures. Once you have found a print that catches your eye, simply add it to your cart and proceed to checkout. At checkout, you will be prompted to enter your shipping and payment information. We accept a variety of payment methods, including credit cards and PayPal. Once your order has been processed, your Dodo art print will be carefully packaged and shipped directly to your door. You can expect high-quality prints that are true-to-life representations of the original artwork. Whether you're looking for a stunning piece of wall decor or a thoughtful gift for an animal lover in your life, our selection of Dodo art prints is sure to impress. Shop today and bring home a piece of history.
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How much do Dodo (Allies Columbiformes Birds Animals) art prints cost?

As a seller of Dodo art prints, we offer a wide range of options for customers to choose from. The cost of these prints can vary depending on factors such as the size and type of print selected. You can choose from various sizes including small, medium, large or extra-large prints. Additionally, there are different types of prints available such as framed or unframed versions. The price range for Dodo art prints offered by Media Storehouse is competitive and affordable compared to other sellers in the market. However, it's important to note that the final cost may also depend on any additional services requested by the customer such as mounting or framing. We provide high-quality Dodo art prints at reasonable prices making them an excellent choice for anyone looking to add some unique artwork to our collection without breaking the bank.
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How will my Dodo (Allies Columbiformes Birds Animals) art prints be delivered to me?

Your Dodo art prints from Media Storehouse will be delivered to you in a safe and secure manner. We take great care in packaging your artwork so that it arrives at your doorstep undamaged. Your prints will be carefully rolled and placed into a sturdy tube for protection during transit. We use trusted delivery partners to ensure that your package is handled with care throughout the shipping process. You can track the progress of your order online, so you know exactly when to expect delivery. Once your Dodo art prints arrive, they can be easily unrolled and framed or displayed as desired. Our high-quality printing process ensures that the colors are vibrant and true-to-life, making these beautiful birds come alive on paper. Whether you're adding to an existing collection or starting a new one, our Dodo art prints are sure to delight bird lovers of all ages.