The Natural History Museum (London) owes its origins to Sir Hans Sloane (1660-1753), a cultured English doctor and an avid collector. At his death he bequeathed his collections to the nation. These formed the nucleus of what would eventually become the Natural History Museum (London), the British Museum and the British Library (Anderson 1997; see also online at httpll: www.nhm.ac.uk).peer-reviewe
This article describes results from a review of South Asian fossils in the Oxford University Museum ...
Fossils collected in Renaissance collection cabinets were items of wonder and curiosity. Although so...
In the 19th century, there was wide-spread public interest in natural history, as reflected in the h...
It is the intent of this paper to delineate the course of events showing relationships between museu...
The primacy of fossils in the Natural History Museum (NHM) goes back to the very origins of the Muse...
The Lithophylacii Britannicii ichnographia [British figured stones] (1699) by Edward Lhwyd, the seco...
Diagnoses of animals, probably written during Linnaeus fil.'s continental tour, starting with Englan...
Dicranurus monstrous trilobite Devonian Period 5.5 x5 x2.5 Onloan from Dr. Kazuo Hiraizumi,Biology D...
In 186lWilliam Tallack wrote: "William C. P. Medlycott, Esq., an English gentleman, who spends a par...
Pagination differs from hardbound copy of thesis held at Cambridge University Library.Many histories...
The British Museum, based in Montague House, Bloomsbury, opened its doors on 15 January 1759, as the...
SummaryPalaeontologist Richard Fortey has produced a fascinating ‘biography’ of London's Natural His...
The Museum of Natural History of Accademia dei Fisiocritici hosts rich collections of natural object...
All scientific and intellectual endeavours advance by building on earlier observations. In organisma...
Ginsburg Léonard. Swinnerton H.H. — Fossils. London, 1960, Collins, The New Naturalist. In: La Terre...
This article describes results from a review of South Asian fossils in the Oxford University Museum ...
Fossils collected in Renaissance collection cabinets were items of wonder and curiosity. Although so...
In the 19th century, there was wide-spread public interest in natural history, as reflected in the h...
It is the intent of this paper to delineate the course of events showing relationships between museu...
The primacy of fossils in the Natural History Museum (NHM) goes back to the very origins of the Muse...
The Lithophylacii Britannicii ichnographia [British figured stones] (1699) by Edward Lhwyd, the seco...
Diagnoses of animals, probably written during Linnaeus fil.'s continental tour, starting with Englan...
Dicranurus monstrous trilobite Devonian Period 5.5 x5 x2.5 Onloan from Dr. Kazuo Hiraizumi,Biology D...
In 186lWilliam Tallack wrote: "William C. P. Medlycott, Esq., an English gentleman, who spends a par...
Pagination differs from hardbound copy of thesis held at Cambridge University Library.Many histories...
The British Museum, based in Montague House, Bloomsbury, opened its doors on 15 January 1759, as the...
SummaryPalaeontologist Richard Fortey has produced a fascinating ‘biography’ of London's Natural His...
The Museum of Natural History of Accademia dei Fisiocritici hosts rich collections of natural object...
All scientific and intellectual endeavours advance by building on earlier observations. In organisma...
Ginsburg Léonard. Swinnerton H.H. — Fossils. London, 1960, Collins, The New Naturalist. In: La Terre...
This article describes results from a review of South Asian fossils in the Oxford University Museum ...
Fossils collected in Renaissance collection cabinets were items of wonder and curiosity. Although so...
In the 19th century, there was wide-spread public interest in natural history, as reflected in the h...