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  1. Homepage
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  3. Archive September 2020

Blog archive: September 2020



  • Gravicalymene bakeri sp. nov., A near complete paratype specimens (left) and a life reconstruction of the animal (right).
    AMRI

    Newly discovered fossil species named after Doctor Who

    A newly discovered trilobite species has been named after Doctor Who actor Tom Baker, by Australian Museum and University of New South Wales scientists, honouring his legacy encouraging young people into careers in STEM.

    Written by Dr Patrick Smith / Category AMRI / Published 30 September 2020
  • 2020 AM Eureka Prizes - Finalists
    Science

    2020 AM Eureka Prizes: Meet the sister-brother Sleek Geeks team taking on the world of water

    How do they do it? Meet some of the 2020 AM Eureka Prizes finalists.

    Written by Cara Bevington / Category Science / Published 29 September 2020
    Eureka Eureka prizes
  • 2020 AM Eureka Prizes - Finalists
    Science

    2020 AM Eureka Prizes: Meet the team looking on the bright side of coral reefs

    How do they do it? Meet some of the 2020 AM Eureka Prizes finalists.

    Written by Cara Bevington / Category Science / Published 29 September 2020
    Eureka Eureka prizes
  • Southern Barred Frog in burnt area
    AMRI

    Frogs surviving the flames: Citizen scientists reveal frogs calling across the fire zone

    We have made a big leap in our understanding of how frogs respond to fire, thanks to citizen scientists across Australia!

    Written by Dr Jodi Rowley Dr Corey Callagan, Dr William Cornwell / Category AMRI / Published 28 September 2020
  • The tube anemone Pachycerianthus fiordlandensis
    AMRI

    Tears of the gods in a tube!

    A recent study of AMRI collections has led to a revision of records from the southwest Pacific and the recognition of a new species.

    Written by Dr Stephen Keable, Sergio Stampar / Category AMRI / Published 08 September 2020
  • Five Critically Endangered land snails from Lord Howe Island and Norfolk Island.
    AMRI

    How does a land snail become a threatened species?

    September 7th, the day the last thylacine died in captivity in 1936, is National Threatened Species Day. Founded to raise awareness of Australia’s plants and animals at risk of extinction, it’s also the occasion of Australia’s Threatened Species Bake-off.

    Written by Dr Isabel Hyman / Category AMRI / Published 07 September 2020
  • Bathurst Earless Dragon (Tympanocryptis mccartneyi)
    AMRI

    Triage for Australia's lizards and snakes

    Which of Australia’s endangered species need our most urgent attention? This was the question facing a group of conservation biologists, including two scientists from the Australian Museum Research Institute, following the most recent round of Red Data Book assessments of our reptiles.

    Written by Glenn Shea / Category AMRI / Published 03 September 2020
    snakes reptiles Lizard
  • Frank Hurley underwater photograph
    Museullaneous

    Hurley and the Torres Strait Diver

    New research by art historian Ann Elias in her book Coral Empires uncovers the full story behind photographer Frank Hurley's iconic images of pearl diving in the Torres Strait in the 1920s.

    Written by Vanessa Finney / Category Museullaneous / Published 03 September 2020
  • Giant horned frog tadpoles
    AMRI

    A tad mysterious: The identity of five fabulous funnel-mouthed tadpoles revealed

    When it comes to surveying for rare and threatened frog species, it’s important to be able to identify the tadpoles too!

    Written by Timothy Cutajar, Dr Jodi Rowley, Christopher Portway Benjamin Tapley, Nguyen Thanh Luan / Category AMRI / Published 03 September 2020
  • Dingo from Fraser Island, Queensland, on the north-east coast of Australia
    AMRI

    This month in Archaeology: When did dingoes first come to Australia?

    For this month’s blog, we examine a paper recently published by Loukas Koungoulos and Melanie Fillios in the Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, in order to answer the question: when did dingoes first come to Australia?

    Written by Dr Amy Way Loukas Koungoulos / Category AMRI / Published 01 September 2020

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Photo of two painted shields

The Australian Museum respects and acknowledges the Gadigal people as the First Peoples and Traditional Custodians of the land and waterways on which the Museum stands.

Image credit: gadigal yilimung (shield) made by Uncle Charles Chicka Madden