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Tanks Everybody!
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/tanks-everybody/Have you ever wondered how large fish specimens are stored here in the Australian Museum collections?
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Closing the gap between species discovery and conservation
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/amri-closing-the-gap/Ensuring amphibians new to science are considered in conservation strategies.
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Molecular support for Hydroides amri and the discovery of its mysterious twin
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/molecular-support-for-hydroides-amri-and-the-discovery-of-its-mysterious-twin/A study not only confirms that Hydroides amri is distinct from Hydroides brachyacantha, but also includes a cryptic species Hydroides nikae.
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A lioness, a seamount and a king: the creativity behind naming three new genera of small crustaceans
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/a-lioness-a-seamount-and-a-king/Three new genera, 17 new species and records on a further 35 known species, this is not the last word on Maerid Crustaceans
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Lost and found: a Rapa Nui stone tool finds its real home
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/lost-and-found-a-rapa-nui-stone-tool-finds-its-real-home/Geochemical analysis of an obsidian tool mistakenly attributed to Rapa Nui challenges current views about societies in the ancient Pacific.
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Five new frog species discovered in fast-disappearing forests
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/amri-five-new-frog-species-discovered/The forests of central Vietnam adjacent Cambodia are home to five new frog species that have hopefully been discovered in the nick of time
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Translating AMRI research into conservation action
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/translating-amri-research-into-conservation-action/IUCN Red List assessments of several hundred Australian land snail species are currently conducted by AMRI scientists.
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A Diploma for ‘Stuffed Fish’, 1883
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/a-diploma-for-stuffed-fish-1883/Why is the recently discovered 1883 International Fisheries Exhibition diploma, designed by Linley Sambourne, unique?
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Fossil tube microstructure helps to address evolutionary unknowns of deep-sea tubeworms
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/fossil-tube-microstructure-helps-to-address-evolutionary-unknowns-of-deep-sea-tubeworms/Do fossil tetragonal Mesozoic tubes belong to the ancestors of the worms living in the deep sea today?
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And a worm award goes to… an AMRI student!
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/and-a-worm-award-goes-to-an-amri-student/AMRI's Yanan Sun wins the Best Student Poster Award for her presentation on invasive calcareous tubeworms.
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Jurassic World by Brickman
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Open until 17 July. -
200 Treasures of the Australian Museum
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