Olive Baboons CAS
Description:
Description: Taxidermied Olive Baboons (Papio anubis) in the African Hall of the Kimball Natural History Museum at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco. Date: 15 April 2009. Source: Own work. Author: BrokenSphere. Permission (Reusing this file): Photo taken by User:BrokenSphere and released under the following license(s). You may use it for any purpose as long as you credit me and follow the terms of the license you choose. Example: © BrokenSphere / Wikimedia Commons If you use this image outside of the Wikimedia projects, please let me know. Where source attribution is required, you may link to this image page.
Included On The Following Pages:
- Life (creatures)
- Cellular (cellular organisms)
- Eukaryota (eukaryotes)
- Opisthokonta (opisthokonts)
- Metazoa (Animal)
- Bilateria
- Deuterostomia (deuterostomes)
- Chordata (Chordates)
- Vertebrata (vertebrates)
- Gnathostomata (jawed fish)
- Osteichthyes
- Sarcopterygii (Lobe-finned fishes)
- Tetrapoda (terrestrial vertebrates)
- Amniota (amniotes)
- Synapsida (synapsids)
- Therapsida (therapsid)
- Cynodontia (cynodonts)
- Mammalia (mammals)
- Theria (Therians)
- Eutheria (eutherian)
- Placentalia (placental)
- Boreoeutheria
- Euarchontoglires
- Euarchonta
- Primates (primates)
- Haplorrhini ("monkeys, apes, and tarsiers")
- Anthropoidea
- Catarrhini
- Cercopithecoidea
- Cercopithecidae (Old World monkeys)
- Cercopithecinae
- Papionini
- Papio (Baboon)
- Papio anubis (Anubis Baboon)
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Source Information
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- cc-by-sa-3.0
- copyright
- BrokenSphere
- creator
- BrokenSphere
- original
- original media file
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- Wikimedia Commons
- ID