Your search returned 50 results
By Page Type
By Tag
- All
- fish (966)
- blog (699)
- fishes of sydney harbour (400)
- First Nations (284)
- Blog (237)
- AMRI (166)
- archives (163)
- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (133)
- insect (126)
- Ichthyology (124)
- Eureka Prizes (115)
- geoscience (109)
- minerals (102)
- climate change (100)
- Fish (91)
- podcast (90)
- Anthropology (89)
- International collections (80)
- Minerals Gallery (78)
- wildlife of sydney (78)
- Labridae (77)
- frog (73)
- gemstone (70)
- staff (70)
- history (62)
- Mollusca (60)
- photography (60)
- gem (59)
- Birds (56)
- Gems (56)
- Indonesia (56)
- AMplify (54)
- shark (54)
- people (53)
- earth sciences (50)
- exhibition (50)
- past exhibitions (50)
- Gobiidae (48)
- death (48)
- education (46)
- sustainability (46)
- Pomacentridae (45)
- Serranidae (44)
- lifelong learning (42)
- Egypt (41)
- Syngnathidae (41)
- science (41)
- Bali (40)
- Earth and Environmental Science (40)
- bird (40)
-
Tim Jarvis AM
https://australian.museum/about/history/exhibitions/trailblazers/tim-jarvis-am/Re-enacted the Antarctic journeys of Douglas Mawson and Ernest Shackleton.
-
William Bligh
https://australian.museum/about/history/exhibitions/trailblazers/william-bligh/Navigated a tiny vessel a distance of 5800 kilometres, charting part of the north-east coast of Australia along the way.
-
Greg Mortimer OAM
https://australian.museum/about/history/exhibitions/trailblazers/greg-mortimer-oam/The first Australian to reach the summits of Mount Everest and K2 in the Himalaya, and mounts Vinson and Minto in Antarctica.
-
Abel Janszoon Tasman
https://australian.museum/about/history/exhibitions/trailblazers/abel-janszoon-tasman/The first European to discover Tasmania and confirm Australia as an island continent.
-
Jessica Watson OAM
https://australian.museum/about/history/exhibitions/trailblazers/jessica-watson-oam/The youngest person to sail solo and unassisted around the world.
-
Footbinding
https://australian.museum/about/history/exhibitions/body-art/footbinding/Chinese folklore attributes the origins of footbinding to a fox who tried to conceal its paws while assuming the human guise of the Shang Empress. Another version suggests that the Empress had a club foot and insisted that all women bind their feet so that hers became the model for beauty.
-
The Meaning of Ta Tau - Samoan Tattoing
https://australian.museum/about/history/exhibitions/body-art/the-meaning-of-ta-tau-samoan-tattoing/The word tatau (tattoo) in Samoan means appropriate, balanced and fitting.
-
Tattooing - Earliest examples
https://australian.museum/about/history/exhibitions/body-art/tattooing-earliest-examples/Tattooed markings on skin and incised markings in clay provide some of the earliest evidence that humans have long practised a wide range of body art.
-
Papua New Guinea Scarification
https://australian.museum/about/history/exhibitions/body-art/papua-new-guinea-scarification/In Papua New Guinea, scarification is usually related to initiation. In the middle Sepik region, it is believed that migrating ancestral crocodiles established human populations.
-
Aboriginal Scarification
https://australian.museum/about/history/exhibitions/body-art/aboriginal-scarification/In Australia, scarring was practised widely, but is now restricted almost entirely to parts of Arnhem Land. Scarring is like a language inscribed on the body, where each deliberately placed scar tells a story of pain, endurance, identity, status, beauty, courage, sorrow or grief.
-
Ramses & the Gold of the Pharaohs
Special exhibition
-
Wansolmoana
Permanent exhibition
Open daily -
School programs and excursions
Virtual excursions
Educator-led tours -
Burra
Permanent education space
10am - 4.30pm