Your search returned 6 results
By Page Type
By Tag
- All
- fish (966)
- blog (699)
- fishes of sydney harbour (400)
- First Nations (276)
- Blog (237)
- AMRI (165)
- archives (157)
- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (133)
- insect (126)
- Ichthyology (124)
- geoscience (109)
- minerals (103)
- climate change (99)
- Eureka Prizes (92)
- Fish (91)
- Anthropology (89)
- podcast (85)
- International collections (80)
- Minerals Gallery (78)
- wildlife of sydney (78)
- Labridae (77)
- frog (72)
- staff (71)
- gemstone (70)
- history (62)
- Mollusca (60)
- gem (59)
- Gems (56)
- Indonesia (56)
- photography (55)
- AMplify (54)
- shark (54)
- Birds (53)
- people (53)
- exhibition (51)
- earth sciences (50)
- past exhibitions (50)
- science (49)
- Gobiidae (48)
- sustainability (46)
- Pomacentridae (45)
- bird (45)
- Serranidae (44)
- exhibitions (44)
- death (42)
- lifelong learning (42)
- Syngnathidae (41)
- past exhibition (41)
- Bali (40)
- Earth and Environmental Science (40)
-
Mammalogy
https://australian.museum/learn/collections/natural-science/mammalogy/Learn about our collection and study of mammals. Mammals include placental mammals such as rodents, primates and whales; marsupials such as kangaroos and koalas; and monotremes such as the platypus and echidna.
-
Animal factsheets
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/Discover the astonishing variety of mammals, birds, reptiles, marine life and more in the Australian Museum collections.
-
Whales find-a-word
https://australian.museum/learn/teachers/classroom-activities/whales-tohora/What can you discover about whales? Complete our find-a-word and dot-to-dot activities from the Whales | Tohorā exhibition to learn more about these beautiful mammals.
-
History of the Mammal Department
https://australian.museum/about/history/people/history-of-the-mammal-department/The Mammalogy department was formed in 1890 under the direction of Edward Pierson Ramsay, the first Australian-born curator for the museum.
-
Whale Graveyard
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/mammals/mammology-collection-whale-graveyard/Many whales are stranded along the New South Wales coast each year, some of which die on the beach. Some carcasses are washed out to sea again, a few are brought straight to the Museum.
-
Endemism in Australian mammals
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/mammals/endemism-in-australian-mammals/Australia possesses a unique assemblage of mammal species, of which over 80% are endemic.
-
Barka: The Forgotten River
Special exhibition
Now on until 23 July 2023 -
Bilas: Body Adornment from Papua New Guinea
Opening 9 June 2023, featuring photographs by Wylda Bayrón.
-
School programs and excursions
Virtual excursions
Educator-led tours -
Burra
Permanent education space
Open daily