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Close up of a shark egg.
An illustration of Eurypterids gathering on a seafloor. Eurypterids are related to arachnids and include the largest known arthropods to have ever lived. They were formidable predators that thrived in warm shallow water, in both seas and lakes, from the mid Ordovician to late Permian (460 to 248 million years ago).
3D rendering of a brain coral isolated on white background
Shell series: sea shells in various colors
prehistoric under water life form cut out on black ground
Goldfish swimming in the water with a black background photographed in Chengdu
Cambrian period animal. 3D visualisacion of anomalocaris. Use for science educational video.
Housefly Mouth Parts under light microscope with white background
Tessellate cone shell hunting over sand
Chiton, Tripoplax regularis. on a rock at Salt Point State Park in Sonoma County, California.
Anomalocaris was an arthropod predatory animal that lived in the seas of the Cambrian Age of British Columbia.
Close up of lion's mane nudibranch or sea slug, Melibe leonina, on kelp leaf.
A 3-D computer illustration of Eurypterid, more commonly known as a Sea Scorpion, from the mid Ordovician to late Permian (460 to 248 million years ago). Eurypterids (sea scorpions) are an extinct group of arthropods that are related to arachnids and include the largest known arthropods to have ever lived. They went extinct during the Permian–Triassic extinction event 252.17 million years ago. Their fossils have a near global distribution. Though purely an artistic interpretation, the structure of the animal is inferred through fossil images and scientific notation of what the species may have looked like within the environment in which they existed.
Abstract Sea life worm Spiral tubeworm Underwater beauty Scuba diver point of view
Ammonite fossil embedded on black glass background.
Shell series: sea shells in various colors
horseshoe crab
Lepidurus packardi, the vernal pool tadpole shrimp, is a small, rare species of tadpole shrimp (Notostraca) found in temporary ponds of the western United States. Branchiopoda. Jepson Prairie Preserve, California.
Dreissena is a genus of small freshwater mussels in the family Dreissenidae in the class Bivalvia. They are found attached to firm substrates by threads from underneath the shells and are the only freshwater bivalves to attach to hard substrates in high densities while having a planktonic larval stage.
A red tubicolous worm (Serpula vermicularis) in the French Mediterranean Sea
An illustration of the extinct Eurypterids Kokomopterus (sea scorpions) scavenging a dead trilobite on a murky lake bottom 418 million years ago.
Photomicrograph of mayfly nymph, Baetis species, with leaflike gills on back. Live specimen. Wet mount, 2.5X objective, transmitted brightfield illumination.
A wood louse if it feels threatened will roll its body into a ball
Underwater Sea Life Nudibranch Scuba diver point of view
Marine flatworm - Planaria, crawling on the glass, Black Sea
Vernal pool tadpole shrimp or Tadpole Shrimp, Lepidurus parkardi, Jepson Prairie Preserve, California, found in Vernal Pools
Monotomidae, Coleoptera Fossil in Burmese amber of Cenomanian era, 100 million years ago, from the state of Myanmar, extreme macro shot
Trilobites try to hide from predator Opabinia in a Cambrian sea full of stromatolites.
Hexagrammos lagocephalus is a colorful marine fish with the common name rock greenling in the greenling family.
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