C. D. Sherborn published in 1940, under the imprint of Cambridge University Press but at his own expense, Where is the – Collection? This idiosyncratic listing of named natural science collections, and their fates, was useful, but incomplete, and uneven in its accuracy. It is argued that those defects were inevitable, given Sherborn’s age and wartime conditions, and that what might seem one of Sherborn’s less impressive works was in fact a pioneering work highly influential in stimulating the production of successor works now much used in curation, and in systematic and descriptive biology and palaeontology. The book also contributed to the development of collections research in the natural sciences, and the history of collections and of mu...
The world's natural history collections represent a vast repository of information on the natural an...
SummaryPalaeontologist Richard Fortey has produced a fascinating ‘biography’ of London's Natural His...
Early in the seventeenth century, Cassiano dal Pozzo made an attempt to gather a comprehensive visua...
C. D. Sherborn published in 1940, under the imprint of Cambridge University Press but at his own exp...
Figure 4 - Differing treatments of Thomas Hawkins. A The original Sherborn entry in Where...
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licen...
Figure 2 - The final bill from Cambridge University Press, tipped into a copy of Where is...
Figure 1 - A The cover of Where is the – Collection? B A sample page (p. 29) f...
© 2017 The Author(s) This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Com...
Charles Weldon (de Burgh) Birch (Count Zelling) (1821-94) was an amateur botanical and zoological co...
The Lithophylacii Britannicii ichnographia [British figured stones] (1699) by Edward Lhwyd, the seco...
This catalogue is referenced in a forthcoming volume: Trevor Levere, Larry Stewart and Hugh Torrens,...
Natural history collections are an incomparable treasure and source of knowledge. Collected over cen...
Natural science collections are documents of change, the fragmentary archive on which we base our kn...
Pagination differs from hardbound copy of thesis held at Cambridge University Library.Many histories...
The world's natural history collections represent a vast repository of information on the natural an...
SummaryPalaeontologist Richard Fortey has produced a fascinating ‘biography’ of London's Natural His...
Early in the seventeenth century, Cassiano dal Pozzo made an attempt to gather a comprehensive visua...
C. D. Sherborn published in 1940, under the imprint of Cambridge University Press but at his own exp...
Figure 4 - Differing treatments of Thomas Hawkins. A The original Sherborn entry in Where...
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licen...
Figure 2 - The final bill from Cambridge University Press, tipped into a copy of Where is...
Figure 1 - A The cover of Where is the – Collection? B A sample page (p. 29) f...
© 2017 The Author(s) This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Com...
Charles Weldon (de Burgh) Birch (Count Zelling) (1821-94) was an amateur botanical and zoological co...
The Lithophylacii Britannicii ichnographia [British figured stones] (1699) by Edward Lhwyd, the seco...
This catalogue is referenced in a forthcoming volume: Trevor Levere, Larry Stewart and Hugh Torrens,...
Natural history collections are an incomparable treasure and source of knowledge. Collected over cen...
Natural science collections are documents of change, the fragmentary archive on which we base our kn...
Pagination differs from hardbound copy of thesis held at Cambridge University Library.Many histories...
The world's natural history collections represent a vast repository of information on the natural an...
SummaryPalaeontologist Richard Fortey has produced a fascinating ‘biography’ of London's Natural His...
Early in the seventeenth century, Cassiano dal Pozzo made an attempt to gather a comprehensive visua...