Site navigation
-
Australian Museum Research
- That's us
- Our Structure & Research Mission
- Research Scientists
- World-leading On-Reef Facilities
- Commercial Molecular Services
- 11th International Polychaete Conference, 2013
- Collections & Research Building
- Foundations of Australian Science
- Overview of Fellowships & Funds
- Research Strategy and Reports
- Research and Collections Advisory Committee
- Australian Museum Eureka Prizes
- AMBS
- Newly Discovered!
- Facilities & Resources
- Research Topics
- Publications
- Our Research Projects
- Rese@rch Web
- That's us
-
Scientific Publications
- About
- Contact
- Instructions
- Records
- Supplements
- Tech Reports Online
- Exchange and Order
- Tech Reports
- Memoirs
- About the Museum
- What's on
- Visiting the Australian Museum
Records of the Australian Museum
Issues of the Records of the Australian Museum are published three times a year and circulated to 84 countries. All that is published in print is, soon afterwards, also freely available online.
Records of the Australian Museum (ISSN 0067-1975) is Australia’s leading Museum-based journal Impact Factor 0.917 and one of the world’s most important sources of taxonomic information on the Australian fauna. Volume 1 was published in 1890 and 1891. Volume 2 spanned the following several years. Volume 20 was published from 1937 to 1940. From volume 34 in 1982, volume-number changed every year. Records of the Australian Museum, volume 62 was published in 2010, volume 63 in 2011. Currently issues of the Records of the Australian Museum are published twice a year and circulated to more than 80 countries.
All that is published in print is, soon afterwards, also freely available online. Every article is DOI registered to enhance cross-linking (interoperability) in the scientific literature.
Dr
Shane McEvey
, Entomologist and Editor
Last Updated: 5 August 2011
Would you like to add a tag?
Sign up to add tags and find out more about the other benefits you can enjoy.
Related items
Cover of the Records of the Australian Museum View full size
Martin Pueschel
© Australian Museum
Australian Museum publications View full size
Shane McEvey
© Australian Museum
Support us
Your support will have a real impact.
Online Shop
Great gifts.
Australian Museum Members
Join today.
Australian Museum Business Services
Professional consulting.
Museum as a Venue
Unique spaces.
Media Resources
Contact Publicity.
news
Isabelle Kingsley
02 February 2012
Ancient cultures, from Greece to Asia, have used urine as a fertiliser to provide nutrients to their crops. Is recycling our urine a radical solution to global food security and saving our waterways?
Patricia Egan
02 February 2012
Archives volunteer, Ada Klinkhamer writes of her experience rehousing and documenting photographs and illustrations prepared for use in publications by Australian Museum ornithologist, Alfred John North.
what's new
what's popular
- Australian Museum Ichthyology Collection
- Australian Lungfish
- Australian Museum Mammalogy Collection
- Australian Museum Ornithology Collection
- Warty Prowfish, Aetapcus maculatus (Günther, 1861)
- Australian Museum Palaeontology Collection
- Palorchestes: A tale of misidentification
- Birds: Aves
- Mammals: Mammalia
- Sawflies, Wasps, Bees and Ants: Order Hymenoptera
recent comments
Blotched Blue-tongue Lizard
Hi Jo,
Reptiles are generally solitary creatures, and inevitably when two animals are placed in an enclosure...
Leaf and Stick Insects: Order Phasmatodea
Hi Doc Pete,
In the AM's Search & Discover section, we keep up to 5 species including Spiny Leaf...
Peron's Tree Frog
These frogs are also in South Australia we go to the River Murray quite often (Morgan) & they are everywhere...






