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The isolated Yellow-footed Rock-wallaby populations of today, were once connected
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/yellow-footed-rock-wallaby-once-connected/Although populations of the threatened Yellow-footed Rock-wallaby are now patchily distributed across the mountain ranges of the southeastern Australian semi-arid zone, a new genetic study has revealed evidence of historic connectivity.
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Weird and wonderful larva explained
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/weird-and-wonderful-larva-explained/A strange beetle larva was brought to the Australian Museum. It turned out to be only the third collection of its family in Australia and a new species!
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Raised from the dead: Species assumed extinct rediscovered on Norfolk Island
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/species-assumed-extinct-rediscovered-on-norfolk-island/Introduced rats and chickens on Norfolk Island love to eat native animals as snacks, and were thought to have wiped out the endemic Campbell’s Keeled Glass Snail … until we recently found a few individuals alive.
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Congratulations to Dr Jeff Leis; Ichthyologist, senior fellow and now honorary member of ISJ!
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/congratulations-to-dr-jeff-leis/Dr Jeff Leis, Senior Fellow at the Australian Museum, has recently become an Honorary Member of the Ichthyological Society of Japan (ISJ).
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Scraps of Coptic Culture
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/scraps-of-coptic-culture/Symbols and identity in complex Egyptian history.
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Frank Hurley's 'underwater' photography
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/frank-hurley-underwater/In the 1920s there were no waterproof cameras. Instead, on his 1922 Torres Strait and Papua expedition, photographer Frank Hurley designed a mobile aquarium to create an illusion of colourful coral life.
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A virtual event to remember: The Whitley Awards 2020
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/a-virtual-event-to-remember-the-whitley-awards-2020/Every year, The Royal Zoological Society of NSW acknowledges the outstanding publications that significantly increase our knowledge of the fauna of the Australasian region with particular emphasis on its conservation. This year was no exception; however, the awards were held online.
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Meet the spectacular Red Wide-bodied Pipefish: Australia's newest endemic fish species
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/meet-the-spectacular-red-wide-bodied-pipefish-australias-newest-endemic-fish-species/Australian Museum scientists have identified a new pipefish species under the waves of our biggest city. Australia’s newest endemic fish species was found hiding in plain sight at a popular Sydney dive spot!
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The lives of creatures obscure, misunderstood, and wonderful: A volume in honour of Ken Aplin 1958–2019
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/the-lives-of-creatures-obscure-misunderstood-and-wonderful-a-volume-in-honour-of-ken-aplin-1958-2019/Kenneth Peter Aplin (1958–2019) was one of Australia’s leading vertebrate systematists, well known as an anatomist, mammalogist, herpetologist, palaeontologist, and archaeologist – he was an altogether unique and admired man.
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This month in Archaeology: Aboriginal heritage as ecological proxy in south-eastern Australia: a Barapa wetland village
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/this-month-in-archaeology-aboriginal-heritage-as-ecological-proxy-in-south-eastern-australia/Dr Amy Way discusses a recently published paper by Pardoe and Hutton in the Australasian Journal of Environmental Management, examining how Aboriginal people traditionally lived in large groups around ecological ‘hotspots.’
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Ramses & the Gold of the Pharaohs
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