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Phil Rye has a proven record as a successful scientific illustrator with several published works and many more in press. He has worked as a free-lance illustrator for several national institutions including some abroad. His main body of work has been for the Natural History Museum, London, illustrating fossils, bones, stone tools, site plans, maps and geological sections for the Palaeontology Department, and flowering plants, ferns and algae for the Botany Department. Much of this work involves the exact scale drawing of specimens that are very often completely new to science and these drawings help provide the first published description of them. Some examples of his work are shown below, followed by a list of books and scientific papers in peer-reviewed journals in which his work has been published.
Andrews, P. and Kelley, J.
(in prep.) Hominoid fossils from Pasalar,
Turkey.
Knapp, S. and Pena, M.
(1999) The Ferns of Paraguay
Meylan, P.A., Moody, R.T.J., Walker, C.A., Chapman, S.D. Sandownia harrisi - a highly derived
trionychoid turtle (testudines;cryptodria) from the early Cretaceous of the
Isle of Wight, England.
Pitts, M. and Roberts, M.B. (1997) Fairweather
Eden. Century Books Ltd, London.
Press, R.
(in prep) The Flora of the Azores.
Roberts, M.B., Parfitt, S. et al (1999) Middle Pleistocene hominid site at Eartham Quarry,
West Sussex. English Heritage Archaeological Report No. 17.
Roberts et al.
(1997) Boxgrove West Sussex: Rescue excavations of a Palaeolithic land surface.
Boxgrove Project B. (1989-1991) Proceedings
of the Prehistoric Society 63, pp.303-358.
Robson, N. (in prep) Monograph on the Hypericaceae
Stringer, C.
(in prep.) The Goughs Cave human fossils:
an introduction.
Sutcliffe, A. (2000) The Natural History of Wimbledon Common.

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