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Barred Longtom, Ablennes hians (Valenciennes, 1846)
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/fishes/barred-longtomablennes-hians-valenciennes-1846/Barred Longtom, Ablennes hians (Valenciennes, 1846)
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Giant Hatchetfish, Argyropelecus gigas Norman, 1930
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/fishes/giant-hatchetfish-argyropelecus-gigas/Giant Hatchetfish, Argyropelecus gigas Norman, 1930
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Yellow Thornbill
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/yellow-thornbill/The Yellow Thornbill is found in open forests, woodlands and shrub lands throughout mainland eastern Australia. The average size is 10cm and it can be identified by its greenish-olive coloured back and white streaked cheeks and ears.
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Yellow-faced Honeyeater
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/yellow-faced-honeyeater/When migrating, the Yellow-faced Honeyeater can be seen in large flocks, with several thousand birds passing every hour in some places.
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Western Australian Giant Sauropod
https://australian.museum/learn/australia-over-time/extinct-animals/western-australian-giant-sauropod/The Giant Sauropod left footprints that are up to 1.5m wide, and scientists have estimated it was more than 45m long - perhaps bigger than any other dinosaur on Earth.
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Woolungasaurus
https://australian.museum/learn/australia-over-time/extinct-animals/woolungasaurus/Woolungasaurus may have given birth to live young in the water, or it may have lumbered out of the water to lay its eggs on the land, like marine turtles do today.
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Tingamarra
https://australian.museum/learn/australia-over-time/extinct-animals/tingamarra/Tingamarra was a small ground-dwelling mammal that ate insects and fruit.
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Wallaby-skin water carrier
https://australian.museum/learn/cultures/atsi-collection/cultural-objects/wallaby-skin-water-carrier-pre-1885/This is a water carrier made from the skin of a wallaby, and was collected in the Lachlan-Darling area of western New South Wales prior to 1885.
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Wallaby trap from northern Queensland
https://australian.museum/learn/cultures/atsi-collection/cultural-objects/indigenous-wallaby-trap-from-northern-queensland/Basket traps such as this one were woven in the shape of a cone with one end tied shut with twine.
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Lapstone Creek Rock Shelter (Emu Cave) and the Eastern Regional Sequence in Australian Archaeology
https://australian.museum/learn/cultures/atsi-collection/australian-archaeology/lapstone-creek-rock-shelter-emu-cave-and-the-eastern-regional-sequence-in-australian-archaeology/Learn about cultural change through time discovered in archaeological deposits.
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Ramses & the Gold of the Pharaohs
Special exhibition
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Wansolmoana
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Burra
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10am - 4.30pm