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  • Victoria Herridge, an NHM expert looks at Lyuba. Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10694.jpg
  • Erin Verwood, Kyan Perera, Ingrid Verwood and Mao Ishiguron try out picking up sticks with mechanical replicas of the mammoths trunks. Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10692.jpg
  • Beatriz Mendes and James Ward look up at a life size model of an adult. Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10685.jpg
  • Ingrid Verwood and Mao Ishiguron look at Lyuba. Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10679.jpg
  • Victoria Herridge, an NHM expert explains Lyuba to James Ward. Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10697.jpg
  • Victoria Herridge, an NHM expert explains Lyuba to James Ward. Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10695.jpg
  • Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10693.jpg
  • Beatriz Mendes looks up at a life size model of an adult. Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10690.jpg
  • Beatriz Mendes looks up at a life size model of an adult. Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10688.jpg
  • Beatriz Mendes and James Ward look up at a life size model of an adult. Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10686.jpg
  • Beatriz Mendes looks up at a life size model of an adult. Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10684.jpg
  • Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10682.jpg
  • Ingrid Verwood and Mao Ishiguron look at Lyuba. Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10680.jpg
  • Beatriz Mendes looks up at a life size model of an adult. Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10687.jpg
  • Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10683.jpg
  • Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10681.jpg
  • Ingrid Verwood and Mao Ishiguron look at Lyuba. Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum (opens 23 May 2014)<br />
It includes huge fossils and life-size models of mammoths and their relatives tower above you and meet Lyuba, the world’s most complete mammoth, as she takes centre stage in the exhibition for her first appearance in western Europe. She is the star of the show, a baby woolly mammoth discovered in Russia’s Yamal Peninsula of Siberia in May 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. Her body was buried in wet clay and mud which then froze, preserving it until she was found by reindeer herder Yuri Khudi and his sons, as they were searching for wood along the frozen Yuribei River thousands of years later. The exhibition also includes some of the best-known species, from the infamous woolly mammoth and the spiral-tusked Columbian mammoth to their island-dwelling relative the dwarf mammoth. South Kensington, London.
    GB10678.jpg
  • Tate Britain launches its major spring show, exhibiting the work of Turner Prize-winning artist Richard Deacon (b.1949 - pictured). It includes large sculptures made of twisted wood, metal, and ceramic such as: Fold 2012, a towering sculpture weighing over 12 tonnes and made of 60 shimmering glazed ceramic bricks; After 1998, a huge serpentine wooden structure that is over 9 metres at its longest point; Struck Dumb 1988  (pictured);  Mammoth 1989  (pictured foreground); and Out of Order 2003, a sprawling sculpture constructed from ribbons of steamed wood. The Tate Britain, London, UK 03 February 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    GB9092.jpg
  • Tate Britain launches its major spring show, exhibiting the work of Turner Prize-winning artist Richard Deacon (b.1949). It includes large sculptures made of twisted wood, metal, and ceramic such as: Fold 2012, a towering sculpture weighing over 12 tonnes and made of 60 shimmering glazed ceramic bricks; After 1998, a huge serpentine wooden structure that is over 9 metres at its longest point; Mammoth 1989  (pictured); and Out of Order 2003, a sprawling sculpture constructed from ribbons of steamed wood. The Tate Britain, London, UK 03 February 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    GB9097.jpg
  • Tate Britain launches its major spring show, exhibiting the work of Turner Prize-winning artist Richard Deacon (b.1949). It includes large sculptures made of twisted wood, metal, and ceramic such as: Fold 2012, a towering sculpture weighing over 12 tonnes and made of 60 shimmering glazed ceramic bricks; After 1998, a huge serpentine wooden structure that is over 9 metres at its longest point; Mammoth 1989  (pictured); and Out of Order 2003, a sprawling sculpture constructed from ribbons of steamed wood. The Tate Britain, London, UK 03 February 2014. Guy Bell, 07771 786236, guy@gbphotos.com
    GB9096.jpg
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