Australian Museum
News Stories
Read the latest news stories from the Australian Museum.
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Bird poo frogs – more species than meets the eye!
Identifying hidden frog species (that look like bird poo) using DNA
AMRI
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What do beetle taxonomists do on their holidays?
For some reason my family holidays always seem to include good beetle collecting localities, even in the most unlikely places.
AMRI -
North Queensland Rock-wallabies cause a rethink of biological theory
Rock-wallabies teach us about evolution, as well as looking cute
AMRI -
Our Global Neighbours: Javanese Shadow Puppets
Even foreigners know it as wayang kulit, literally shadow hide, puppet or shadow theatre.
Science
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The Australian Museum Research Institute gets a worm!
A team of researchers celebrates the Australian Museum Research Institute (AMRI) by naming a new species of calcareous tubeworm!
AMRI
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Communicating science
Deborah Smith, from UNSW's Faculty of Science, spoke to Alex Danilatos about careers in science communication.
Explore magazine
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91 new seaworm species described from Lizard Island
An amazing 91 new species of seaworms from coral reefs off Lizard Island have just been described!
AMRI -
The Rare Endevours
With three pairs of feeding legs instead of the standard two, the seldom found Endevourid amphipod Crustaceans, make you check thrice.
AMRI -
Controlling the controller
In the biological control of pests, how do we make sure the control agents won’t go AWOL?
AMRI
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Incredible Photographs From the Archives: Negative No.304
A blog series investigating stories and images from the earliest collection of photographs in the Museum's history.
Museullaneous -
Three tiny, green-blooded frogs sing like birds
All three species of tiny, pointy snouted, green-blooded frogs from the forests of Vietnam have unique, bird-like calls
AMRI
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The Australian Museum Science Festival 2015
Each year the Australian Museum celebrates National Science Week with the Australian Museum Science Festival (AMSF).
At the Museum
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AMRI ichthyologist awarded top honour
AMRI Senior Fellow Dr Jeff Leis receives the most prestigious award in fish systematics
AMRI -
Recovering a 'lost collection' - the Saemann minerals
Not much has been written about our oldest surviving mineral collection because for more than 150 years it’s been almost lost to sight.
Museullaneous