Your search returned 16 results
By Page Type
By Tag
- All
- fish (966)
- blog (696)
- fishes of sydney harbour (401)
- First Nations (299)
- Blog (236)
- AMRI (169)
- archives (164)
- Eureka Prizes (146)
- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (135)
- insect (126)
- Ichthyology (124)
- geoscience (109)
- minerals (102)
- climate change (100)
- podcast (94)
- Fish (91)
- Anthropology (89)
- International collections (80)
- Minerals Gallery (78)
- wildlife of sydney (78)
- Labridae (77)
- frog (74)
- gemstone (70)
- history (64)
- photography (64)
- Mollusca (60)
- gem (59)
- staff (59)
- Birds (56)
- Gems (56)
- Indonesia (56)
- education (56)
- shark (55)
- AMplify (54)
- people (53)
- earth sciences (50)
- past exhibitions (50)
- exhibition (49)
- Gobiidae (48)
- sustainability (46)
- Pomacentridae (45)
- Serranidae (44)
- lifelong learning (42)
- science (42)
- Earth and Environmental Science (41)
- Syngnathidae (41)
- Ancient Egypt (40)
- Bali (40)
- bird (40)
- dangerous australians (40)
-
Zebra Finch
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/zebra-finch-taeniopygia-guttata/With a time-span of 70 to 80 days from hatching to becoming sexually active, the Zebra Finch is one of the fastest maturing bird species recorded.
-
Galah
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/galah/The name Galah comes from the Yuwaalaraay language word “gilaa”. In Australia, we call people galahs if they are acting silly or do something foolish. The Yuwaalaraay language area extends across north west NSW on the Barwon River into south west Queensland along the Culgoa and Balonne Rivers.
-
Emu
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/emu/The name 'emu' is not an Aboriginal word. It may have been derived from an Arabic word for large bird and later adopted by early Portuguese explorers and applied to cassowaries in eastern Indonesia. The term was then transferred to the Emu by early European explorers to Australia.
-
Budgerigar
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/budgerigar/Since its introduction into captivity, the Budgerigar (or 'budgie') has been bred into a variety of colour forms, including pure white, blue, yellow, mauve, olive and grey. These colour morphs would not survive in the wild.
-
Mulgara
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/mammals/mulgara/Mulgaras can get all the water they need from food and produce highly concentrated urine and dry pellets of poo so that they don’t waste a drop.
-
Red Kangaroo
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/mammals/red-kangaroo/The Red Kangaroo is an iconic Australian animal of the arid zone and is the largest living marsupial in the world.
-
Discover more
2025 Australian Geographic Nature Photographer of the Year
Special exhibition
Free entry
Now open -
Discover more
Unfinished Business
Special exhibition
Free entry
Now open -
Find out more
Surviving Australia
Permanent exhibition
Free entry
Now open
-
Find out more
Burra
Permanent kids learning space
Free entry
10am - 4.30pm
-
Discover more
Minerals
Permanent exhibition
Free entry
Open daily