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Blobfish (aka Mr Blobby)
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/fishes/fathead-psychrolutes-aka-mr-blobby/Blobfish (genus Psychrolutes microporos) trawled during the NORFANZ expedition.
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Yabby
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/crustaceans/black-yabbie/An Australian yabby can travel kilometres across wet land in search of new waters to make its home.
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Blind Snake
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/reptiles/blind-snake/Blind Snakes have very poor eyesight and their eyes look like very small dark spots on the head, giving them their name.
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Giant Beach Worm
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/worms/giant-beach-worm/Giant Beach Worms are long and thin. They can grow up 2.5 m long. They have hundreds of body segments. They have short tentacles near their head.
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Eastern Water Skink
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/reptiles/eastern-water-skink/Eastern Water Skinks are really good swimmers.
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Salps
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/sea-squirts/what-is-a-salp/Despite looking rather like a jellyfish, salps are a member of the Tunicata, a group of animals also known as sea squirts. They are taxonomically closer to humans than jellyfish
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Stone Centipedes - Living Fossils
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/centipedes/centipedes-stone-centipede-living-fossils/The little yellow or red-brown creatures known to science as Lithobiomorpha may not look like much, but they are living records of Australia's ancient natural history.
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Hoodwinker Sunfish, Mola tecta Nyegaard et al 2017
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/fishes/hoodwinker-sunfish-mola-tecta/The Hoodwinker Sunfish, Mola tecta, is a new species of sunfish that has been 'hiding in plain sight' for over 125 years.
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Machu Picchu and the Golden Empires of Peru
Now open
Tickets on sale -
Tails from the Coasts
Special exhibition
Opening Saturday 10 May -
Wild Planet
Permanent exhibition
Open daily -
Minerals
Permanent exhibition
Open daily