Australian Museum Magazine 1921-1961
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YEAR | VOLUME | CONTENTS |
---|---|---|
1921-1923 | Volume 01 | Contents, Index |
1921, April | Vol 01 No 01 |
The objects of the Australian Museum |
Notes | ||
The scope and work of the Australian Museum | ||
The management of the Australian Museum | ||
Blackfellows' pictures | ||
Australian insects: White ant communities; the white butterfly migration | ||
The lure of the big nugget | ||
A crawling jelly-fish from Port Jackson | ||
Snakes | ||
Museum groups | ||
1921, August | Vol 01 No 02 | Lord Howe Island: a naturalist's paradise |
The depths of the sea | ||
Some large non-venomous snakes and their food | ||
Some large non-venomous snakes and their food | ||
Spiders, poisonous and otherwise | ||
Quaint crustaceans | ||
The Welcome Stranger nugget | ||
1921, December | Vol 01 No 03 | Editorial |
Australian mammals and why they should be protected | ||
Some famous diamonds and their story | ||
A naturalist on the Great Barrier Reef | ||
The spider-eating insects of Australia | ||
The RAOU conference and museum v private collections | ||
Primitive magic and sorcery | ||
Peculiar agencies of animal distribution | ||
Electric rays | ||
Notes and news | ||
1922, March | Vol 01 No 04 | Editorial |
Notes and news | ||
Native races of the Mid-Pacific | ||
A seaside ramble | ||
Rats and fleas in their relation to plague | ||
Pigs' tusks and armlets | ||
Toilet articles from ancient Egypt | ||
Migratory locusts | ||
Country production week exhibits | ||
Extension lectures | ||
Breast ornament | ||
1922, July | Vol 01 No 05 | Colour plate - Babblers |
Editorial, Cayley's birds of Australia | ||
Notes and news | ||
Notes on the Babblers | ||
The making of a museum group | ||
The islands of New South Wales and their birds | ||
The story of the hookworm | ||
A horse's hardship | ||
Bird notes | ||
Ocean island: the phosphate industry | ||
A food hanger, with rat disc, from Fiji | ||
1922, October | Vol 01 No 06 | Editorial. Museums ancient and modern |
Notes and news | ||
How savages use the sea shells | ||
Brief history of the Australian Museum | ||
Experiences and impression of a collecting trip on a trawler | ||
Stick and leaf insects | ||
Belmont British, Grand Champion bulldog | ||
Bird notes | ||
The queen of spinners | ||
The chameleon | ||
1923, January | Vol 01 No 07 | Editorial. Museums and endowments |
Notes and news | ||
A naturalist in the Upper Chichester Valley | ||
A romance in the life of the Little Penguin | ||
Opal, the rainbow gem | ||
An example of parrallelism in human culture | ||
The Yellow Monday cicada | ||
War in the garden | ||
Reminiscences of the "Challenger" expedition | ||
The mystery lake | ||
The Red-whiskered Bulbul | ||
The Palolo worm | ||
1923, April | Vol 01 No 08 | Editorial. The Australian fauna |
Notes and news | ||
Sea-dragons (Phyllopteryx) | ||
Essay competition | ||
A talk about shells | ||
The Praying Mantis | ||
Crustacean camoufleurs | ||
Some little known lizards - the geckos | ||
Primitive fire production | ||
Life and strife among sea birds | ||
1923, July |
Vol 01 No 09 | Editorial. The Australian Museum buildings |
Two new museum groups | ||
The recent archaeological discovery in Egypt | ||
A whale of bygone days | ||
The sulphur island | ||
The use of Australian fig trees and their associated fig wasps in reafforestation work in the Hawaiian Islands | ||
Barter, currency and coinage | ||
Notes and news | ||
1923, October | Vol 01 No 10 | Editorial |
Notes and news | ||
A tomako, or head-hunters canoe, from the Solomon Islands | ||
Prize essay competition | ||
The mud-dwellers of Kaimari | ||
The beachcomber and his tropic isle | ||
Meteorites | ||
A dinosaur exhibit | ||
The Pan-Pacific science congress | ||
Lecture notes | ||
1924-1926 | Volume 02 | Contents, Index |
1924, January | Vol 02 No 01 | Editorial. Children and museums |
Australian pearl fisheries | ||
A visit to the Belabula caves | ||
The stick-nest building rats of Australia | ||
Living on a volcano | ||
Crab hunting on the north coast | ||
Some caterpillars injurious to man | ||
1924, April | Vol 02 No 02 | Editorial: Expansion and congestion |
Aua Island (British new Guinea). Ethnographical notes and illustrations | ||
Wild life of the Mallee | ||
Cannibalism among snakes | ||
Boomerangs | ||
Some Australian insects injurious to Man | ||
An excursion to Broken Hill | ||
Modern taxidermy | ||
The extraordinary habits of a tame magpie | ||
1924, July | Vol 02 No 03 | Editorial |
Our feathered friends, or birds in relation to agriculture | ||
Prize essay: A visit to the Australian Museum | ||
Museums of the past | ||
A day in the life of the Sand Bubbler Crab | ||
A means toward an end | ||
Stoats and weasels | ||
Bronze and ivory figures from Burmah | ||
The Dodd collection: a liberal education in entomology | ||
The mud-sucking platypus: Abrief history | ||
Fishes and the movies | ||
1924, October | Vol 02 No 04 | Editorial: Museum, not mausoleum |
The largest marsupial | ||
As extinct as the Dodo | ||
The story of a rock dredged from the sea | ||
The sago industry of Papua | ||
The honey-eating marsupial mice of Australia | ||
Dinosaur eggs | ||
Curious habit of the hedgehog | ||
Radium and the age of the Earth | ||
The fruit bat group | ||
Snakes and snake venom | ||
1925, January | Vol 02 No 05 | Editorial |
A naturalist on the Nepean River | ||
A museum collector in Papua | ||
Stone fishes and the art of camouflage | ||
The story of the oyster | ||
The fruit-bats or flying-foxes of Australia | ||
Destruction of the Whitsunday Group fringing reefs | ||
What I found | ||
1925, April | Editorial | |
The birth and growth of an oyster | ||
Death of Professor WA Haswell | ||
A visit to the Barrington Tops Plateau | ||
The homes of birds | ||
Some strange African fruit bats | ||
Primitive musical instruments | ||
Maggots | ||
The animal life of the Nepean River | ||
Raining fishes | ||
1925, July | Vol 02 No 07 | Editorial |
Captain Cook's artists | ||
A visit to Kandy Museum | ||
Obituary. WH Hargraves, Dr Eric Sinclair | ||
The cultivation of the oyster | ||
The Sand Wasp's burrow | ||
Feathered sylphids of the forest | ||
Stranded seafarers | ||
Stencilled handmarks | ||
1925, October | Vol 02 No 08 | Editorial. Save Australia |
The horse and its ancestors | ||
The story of the freshwater eel | ||
Primitive initiation | ||
Observations on the yabbie | ||
Obituaries. AR McCulloch, JD Ogilvy, Thos Steel | ||
The perils of an oyster | ||
Life of the tidal flats | ||
1926, January | Vol 02 No 09 | Editorial: Save Australia |
In the Queensland bush | ||
A probable relic of La Perouse | ||
The Aborigines of Australia | ||
The bottle and glass rocks, Port jackson. A marine zoologists paradise | ||
The Red-whiskered Bulbul | ||
The Emperor Gum Moth and its allies | ||
The Deutsches Museum | ||
1926, April | Vol 02 No 10 | Editorial |
From sea to soup | ||
The pearl of the Pacific | ||
The heath wren | ||
Mineral collecting on the Northern rivers of New South Wales | ||
Allan Riverstone McCulloch | ||
The Gordian Worm | ||
Earthworms | ||
A giant fish | ||
The Ravi, or Papuan club house. A recent exhibit | ||
A new gallery exhibit. A large paper wasp's nest | ||
The extinct horned turtle Meiolania | ||
1926, July | Vol 02 No 11 | Editorial |
The Wellington Caves | ||
Discolouration of harbour waters | ||
The Wunderlich aboriginal group | ||
Tambourine Mountain, Queensland | ||
Obituaries. JJ Fletcher, MA, BSC, Sir Hugh Dixson | ||
The mystery of maursupial birth and transference to the pouch | ||
Some familiar butterflies | ||
1926, October | Vol 02 No 12 | Editorial: A marine biological station |
Obituary. Charles Hedley | ||
A chapter in the life of a cicada | ||
Insect foods of the aborigines | ||
On the cause of phosphorescent light in sea water | ||
The recent expedition to the Santa Cruz Group | ||
The cameo shell | ||
The birth of an island | ||
Turtles' eggs as food | ||
Museum postcards | ||
Aboriginal message sticks | ||
Legless lizards or 'snakes with fins' | ||
More life on tidal flats | ||
1927-1929 |
Volume 03 |
Contents, Index |
1927, January |
Vol 03 No 01 | Editorial: Centenary of the Australian Museum |
The largest crab | ||
Rare New Zealand birds | ||
Sharks | ||
Winter whiteness. A new museum group | ||
Pottery, an ancient art | ||
The sawfish | ||
The story of Nototheria | ||
With the RAOU to the Barrington Tops district | ||
1927, April | Vol 03 No 02 | Editorial |
Cruising in the Santa Cruz | ||
The Wandering Albatross | ||
The Queensland Lungfish | ||
Further notes upon marsupial birth | ||
The Carrier Shell | ||
A visit to Jenolan caves. The Skeleton Cave. | ||
Organic evolution | ||
Wombats and their ways | ||
The 'resurrected' snail | ||
1927, July | Vol 03 No 03 | Editorial |
Cruising the Santa Cruz | ||
History of the trout in New South Wales | ||
Water bugs | ||
Australia's largest fossil, the Rhoetosaurus dinosaur | ||
Angler fishes | ||
A census of Australian fishes | ||
1927, October | Vol 03 No 04 | The first Australian Museum |
The native bear | ||
Last days at Santa Cruz | ||
A romance of two words - ammonia and ammonite | ||
The flower of the wave | ||
A Lilliputian marine battle | ||
A gigantic extinct lizard | ||
Harmful Australian spiders | ||
A remarkable fish parasite | ||
The case and faggot moths | ||
1928, January | Vol 03 No 05 | Control of pests |
Catching sharks for profit | ||
The Irish Deer | ||
Peeps into sea-bird home life | ||
Some dwellers of the bush | ||
Amber | ||
One hundred years | ||
The late WEJ Paradice and the Australian Museum | ||
In the Macpherson Range | ||
1928, April | Vol 03 No 06 | Through the land of little rain: Glimpses of nature in Central Australia |
The Kingsgate Molybdenite Mines | ||
War against pests | ||
An unwelcome guest of man | ||
Burragorang Valley and beyond | ||
Aboriginal axes | ||
The Colong Caves | ||
1928, July | Vol 03 No 07 | Editorial: The Great Barrier Reef expedition |
Sea-cows. The story of the Dugong | ||
Sea Anemones and their associates | ||
Water supply of the Aborigines | ||
Hidden dwellers of the tidal flats | ||
The habits of our Common shore crabs | ||
The late John Hopson: an appreciation | ||
Feathers and fins. The birds and fishes of Michaelmas Cay, Great Barrier Reef, Queensland | ||
1928, October | Vol 03 No 08 | A link with the Leverian Museum |
Bicentenary of the birth of Captain James Cook | ||
Jenny Hanivers | ||
New Guinea: Land of the devil devil | ||
The mountain minnow | ||
Textile work on Pentecost Island, New Hebrides | ||
Days on the Daintree, a tropic river | ||
1929, January | Vol 03 No 09 | Birds and the bush |
Alligator or crocodile? | ||
The flight of the fishes | ||
Barrallier's Blue Mountain exploration in 1802 | ||
A naturalist in the Gulf country | ||
With the Great Barrier Reef expedition | ||
The lure of a mangrove swamp | ||
1929, April | Vol 03 No 10 | Editorial: Exploration of the seas |
Marine animals from low isles, Queensland | ||
Aboriginal adaptability | ||
Life in a mangrove swamp | ||
An eel-fare at Parramatta | ||
Fossil hunting at Quidong | ||
Page from our past | ||
Naturalists in Australia, the Frenchmen | ||
1929, October | Vol 03 No 11 | The discovery of the Queensland Lungfish |
Permanent method of storing valuable natural history specimens | ||
Quaint creatures of a coral isle | ||
The bird man | ||
The rock warbler | ||
Microscopic mites of the sea | ||
Teeth of mammals | ||
Perry’s 'Arcana' | ||
1929, October | Vol 03 No 12 | The reef builder |
Honeyeaters of the heath | ||
Deep sea exploration on the ‘Dana’ | ||
Cave hunting and what we found | ||
Captain Cook's leatherjacket | ||
A naturalist on the south-west plains | ||
1930-1932 | Volume 04 |
Contents, Index |
1930, January | Vol 4 No 01 | The lyre bird at home, a new gallery group for the Museum |
Along Australia's northern strand | ||
The fight against insect pests | ||
The habits of cuckoos | ||
Inhabitants of the deep | ||
The antiquity of man | ||
1930, April | Seals on the Victorian coast and their feeding habits | |
Shell ornamentation | ||
Some Australian cuckoos | ||
Saving the native bear | ||
The investigation of ocean waters | ||
Centipedes and centipede bites | ||
Around Australia's nor'-west boundary | ||
Insects and disease: Some further aspects of applied entomology | ||
What is the life span of a bird? | ||
The Auckland War Memorial Museum | ||
1930, July | Vol 04 No 03 | Charles Sturt, explorer and naturalist |
Do we eat enough fish? | ||
The bronze cuckoos of Australia | ||
A termite nest exhibit | ||
Termite cities of the plains | ||
The teeth of fishes | ||
Mount Kosciusko in summer and winter | ||
1930, October | Vol 04 No 04 | The Waterhouse collections |
Wild life on the Nullarbor Plain | ||
The secret of sight | ||
The great whales of Australia and Antarctica | ||
Black Australia | ||
The freshwater eel | ||
John brazier, conchologist: Obituary | ||
1931, January | Vol 04 No 05 | Restored head of a large extinct Australian iizard |
Nature rambles at Trial Bay | ||
Sea slugs | ||
The external structure of birds | ||
Some common spiders of the Sydney district | ||
Hints on the preservation of insects and spiders | ||
Ants' cows and cow sheds | ||
Trilobites | ||
Octavius Charles Beale: Obituary | ||
1931, April | Vol 04 No 06 | The William Hatfield Yates collection of minerals |
A-trouting we will go | ||
Mineral collecting in Central Australia | ||
Diatoms | ||
Asbestos: Its occurrence and uses | ||
Rock and goose barnacles | ||
Wild life on inland waters | ||
1931, July | Vol 04 No 07 | Butterflies and ants |
Joadja memories | ||
The teeth of reptiles | ||
Alfred Eland Shaw: Obituary | ||
Lake Burrill and how our coastal lakes were formed | ||
Megascolides, the world's biggest earthworm | ||
The Stanthorpe granite belt | ||
The HM Stephen collection of may-flies | ||
The Corella |
||
1931, October | Vol 04 No 08 | Australian wild life |
Attack and defence among the insects | ||
Some ground-dwelling birds, Part I | ||
Queen Nefertiti | ||
David Starr Jordan: Obituary | ||
Elsdon Best: Obituary | ||
Some furred natives of our coastal region | ||
Skates and rays | ||
Aboriginal flaked implements | ||
1932, January | Vol 04 No 09 | Cowries |
Our coastal sponges | ||
The eye and eyesight | ||
The life of a dragonfly | ||
Some Australian ticks | ||
1932 April | Vol 04 No 10 | The egg-laying furred animals of Australia |
The oceanic angler fishes | ||
Some Australian wood-destroying insects | ||
Arthur Mills Lea: Obituary | ||
The way of the wasp. Part I | ||
In the haunt of the white hawk. Wild nature of the Otway Forest | ||
Snails | ||
1932, July | Vol 04 No 11 | Infants that commit murder |
An aboriginal book-plate | ||
Recording the song of the Lyre Bird | ||
The isle of desolation | ||
The Australian Museum Mystriosaur | ||
The way of the wasp. Part II | ||
Rarotonga old and new in the South Seas | ||
The Chinaman Fish | ||
1932, October | Vol 04 No 12 | The Science Congress |
A rare fish | ||
Kerguelen Island, its animals and plants | ||
The queen moth of the New South Wales forest | ||
The Bent-wing Swift Moth | ||
Camping in a Gibba-Gunyah, the excavation of an aboriginal rock shelter | ||
Biographical notice of WW Thorpe | ||
Sea-hares | ||
The story of Rarotonga | ||
1933-1935 | Volume 05 | Contents, Index |
1933, January |
Vol 05 No 01 | Our native slug |
Collecting on the Murrumbidgee | ||
Areca, betel and lime - a primitive narcotic | ||
Aquatic insects | ||
Biographical notice of Dr T Storie Dixson | ||
The maternal instinct in insects | ||
The natural history of Rarotonga | ||
Reviews | ||
Some aboriginal beliefs and customs | ||
1933, April | Vol 05 No 02 | Shells in the Waterhouse collection |
George Tobin, a neglected naturalist | ||
Special exhibits | ||
Sea-stars and their allies | ||
Silk culture | ||
The collection of coins and medals | ||
Leeches | ||
Ernst Johannes Schmidt | ||
Reviews | ||
1933, July | Vol 05 No 03 | Feast and ceremony in native life |
The Broken Hill Proprietary Block 14 Company, Limited, mineral collection | ||
An aboriginal art gallery | ||
Bird economics | ||
Silk and its economics | ||
Some household insect pests, Part I | ||
Through tropic Queensland | ||
1933, October | Vol 05 No 04 | Scarlet honeyeaters |
A recently acquired collection of minerals | ||
Coral and the Great Barrier Reef | ||
The oldest human implements and their discovery | ||
The poisonous spiders of Australia | ||
Frogs and toads | ||
Some household insect pests. Part II | ||
Through tropic Queensland | ||
1934, January | Vol 05 No 05 | Banksian Cockatoo |
Tyrian Purple: An ancient industry | ||
Reviews | ||
The Cuddie Springs bone bed | ||
Australian wood moths | ||
Wild nature in North Australia | ||
The mighty polyp | ||
The mid-north coast | ||
Ethnological notes | ||
1934, April | Vol 05 No 06 | Gouldian Finches |
Crane flies or 'Daddy Longlegs' | ||
The Lotus Bird | ||
Rossel Island money: A unique system | ||
Some Central Australian mammals | ||
The Australian aboriginal from infancy to parenthood | ||
The sea serpent and its kind | ||
The first naturalists in Australia | ||
Review | ||
1934, July | Vol 05 No 07 | Willy Wagtail |
Museum buildings | ||
Silk from shells: An ancient industry | ||
Fishes and flowers | ||
Tektites | ||
A Tasmanian flaked axe of unusual size | ||
Piccaninnies of the 'Centre' | ||
The food of trout | ||
Reviews | ||
Stilbite collecting at Garrawilla | ||
Fighting and strategy, how birds defend their homes | ||
The bamboo in Australia | ||
1934, October | Vol 05 No 08 | The Sugar Glider |
A mirror from the Temple of a Thousand Ages, Peiping, China | ||
Marsupial gliders or 'flying possums' | ||
The beaks of birds | ||
Tattooing of the Motu tribe, Papua | ||
Ichthyosaurs | ||
Australian shells: Slit shells and false limpets | ||
Sir Tannatt William Edgeworth David | ||
Locusts and grasshoppers | ||
1935, January | Vol 05 No 09 | The Gillbird or Wattle Bird |
Some fishes of the Sydney district | ||
Obituary: William Sutherland Dun | ||
Trilobite hunting in the North | ||
Reviews | ||
The largest gliders or 'flying possums' | ||
Australian shells. Ear-shells and wide-mouthed shells | ||
The spear-thrower | ||
A manus house, Admiralty Islands | ||
Native girls, New Guinea | ||
Basket-making, Cape York | ||
1935, April | Vol 05 No 10 | Fantailed Cuckoo |
Australian shells. Top, turban, pheasant and dolphin shells | ||
Ernest Wunderlich, FRAS | ||
The fish and the ring: In fable and in fact | ||
The adventures of a tobacco tin | ||
Hawk moths | ||
Caloundra: A naturalists' El Dorado | ||
Review | ||
Fishing in Tanga | ||
Wonders of the ant world, Part 1 | ||
1935, July | Vol 05 No 11 | The Whistler or White-throated Thickhead |
Darwin in Australia | ||
Obituary: Mrs MJ Waterhouse | ||
A reptilian combat | ||
A shield tree | ||
The life and uses of Beche-de-mer | ||
Wonders of the ant world, Part II | ||
The story of money | ||
The rat problem of the cane fields | ||
Australian shells. The liotias, wheel shells, nerites, cap, sugar and true limpets. |
||
1935, October | Vol 05 No 12 | Frogmouth |
The Sydney district a hundred million years ago | ||
The Whitsunday Isles | ||
Egyptological additions to our collections | ||
Australian shells: the winks, rissoids, rissinoids and stump shells | ||
Law and order among the Australian aborigines | ||
Reviews | ||
Spiders and fish | ||
1936-1938 | Volume 06 | Contents, Index |
1936, January | Vol 06 No 01 | Devil Ray |
Essay Competition | ||
A geological relief map of New South Wales | ||
The lyrebird display for the screen | ||
Ant-lions | ||
Australian shells. The Slipper, Cup-and-Saucer, Cap and Horse-hoof Limpets, Horn Shells and Triphoras | ||
The Myall Lakes: then and now | ||
1936, April | Vol 06 No 02 | A limestone cave in the Australian Museum |
The Wing Fish | ||
The feet of birds | ||
The life history of a Tipulid Fly | ||
Seaweed crabs and their camouflage | ||
Some natural enemies of the engineer | ||
Australian shells. Screw, Blind, Hairy-keeled and Worm shells, Violet Snails, Carrier shells and others | ||
A new mineral display. Fluorescence of minerals in ultra-violet rays | ||
Canoemen of the Purari | ||
1936, July | Vol 06 No 03 | Aztec calendar stone |
Birds that dive for a living | ||
The Tuross River- an entomological paradise | ||
Victoria's Pink Lakes | ||
Graveyards of the Pacific. The Elizabeth and Middleton Reefs | ||
Elston entomological collection | ||
Abnormalities among shells | ||
1936, October | Vol 06 No 04 | A prehistoric mortar from New Guinea |
Magic among primitive peoples | ||
A rock-pool dining room | ||
Australian shells. Strombs, Scorpion, or Spider shells, Sea Butterflies and Ladder shells | ||
A creed for nature lovers | ||
Scientific literature and the museum | ||
The daily life of the Australian Aboriginal | ||
The origin of Australian mammals | ||
By sea and mountain: with orchid hunters in the Mullumbimby district | ||
1937, January | Vol 06 No 05 | Art Galleries and Museum's Association of Australia and New Zealand |
The Cup Moths | ||
Amongst the aborigines | ||
Double-headed fishes in Australia and New Zealand | ||
Collecting in Central and Northern Australia | ||
The gong signals of the Tanga | ||
An appeal for the preservation of prehistoric remains in Australia | ||
Quartz | ||
1937, April | Vol 06 No 06 | A tribal elder |
Insect musicians. Part I | ||
The life history of the Gippsland Crayfish | ||
The Cyclops Mountains of Dutch New Guinea | ||
A native fisherman | ||
The domestic sheep and its origin | ||
Bathytoshia, the giant stingaree of Australia | ||
The crab in medicine, magic and myth | ||
1937, July | Vol 06 No 07 | The art of the preparator |
The Blue-bottle - terror of the surf bather | ||
Introducing the lizards | ||
Australian shells: the Tritons, Warped shells, Frog shells and Sand shells | ||
Parasites and parasitism | ||
Insect musicians. Part 2 | ||
1937, October |
|
New marsupial groups in the Australian Museum |
|
Some early glimpses of Australian wildlife | |
The ocean depths and their denizens | ||
Introducing the lizards. Part 2 | ||
Great Britain's most isolated outpost of Empire | ||
The nature lore of Lafcadio Hearn | ||
Australian shells. Helmet, Tun, Fig, and Egg shells, and the Cowries | ||
Carnegie Corporation of New York | ||
1938, January | Vol 06 No 09 | Naturalists of the First Fleet |
Zeolites | ||
Australian shells. Volutes, Melon Shells, Olives, Rice, Harp, Margin, and Cross-barred Shells | ||
Australian insects. I. Introduction | ||
The extinct birds of Lord Howe Island | ||
1938, April | Vol 06 No 10 | A footnote to history |
Australian shells. Auger and Cone shells | ||
The habits of Sidyma longipes, an Australian spider |
||
The International Hunting Exhibition at Berlin | ||
Birds and a cuckoo: mysteries of bird behaviour | ||
Some habits of an Assassin Bug | ||
Australian insects. 2. Silverfish and their allies | ||
1938, July | Vol 06 No 11 | A platypus stamp |
Sea-squirts: remarkable marine animals | ||
New ethnographical exhibits in the Australian Museum | ||
The eggs of Australian sharks and rays | ||
The R H Phillips collection of Fijian moths | ||
Chalcedonic quartz | ||
Australian insects. 3. The Collembola or Springtails | ||
The new meteorite exhibit in the Australian Museum |
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1938, October | Vol 06 No 12 | Science news a century ago |
The aboriginal rock engravings of the Sydney district | ||
The Giant Toad Bufo marinus in Australia | ||
Fiji: a correction | ||
Australian insects. 4. The mayflies | ||
Australian shells. Spindle and Band shells, Whelks, and the False Trumpet shell | ||
The story of crystals | ||
1939-1942 | Volume 07 | Contents, Index |
1939, June | Vol 07 No 01 | The Percy Marks collection of opals |
The Green-backed Mangrove Heron at nest | ||
Aboriginal drawings of the Carnarvon Range, Queensland | ||
Australian shells. Mitres | ||
Pictorial composition in Australian aboriginal rock art | ||
Living fossils | ||
Australian insects versus the dragonflies | ||
The nature and origin of life | ||
The Wunderlich archaeological library | ||
1939, September | Vol 07 No 02 | Recent work in the Museum |
Prehistoric stone objects from New Guinea | ||
The coals of your life | ||
Slaters or wood-lice | ||
The aboriginal rock paintings of New South Wales | ||
Early theories of the Earth | ||
Australian insects. VI. Orthoptera:1.The cockroaches | ||
Heralds of Spring | ||
Australian shells: Dog Whelks, Dove shells, Ivory shells and Small Whelks | ||
1939, December | Vol 07 No 03 | Scientific libraries |
Terns and their habits. Feathered fishers of sea and shore | ||
Australian shells. Rock shells, Smoke shells and Trophons | ||
Australian insects. VII. Orthoptera: 2.The Mantids | ||
Fishes in flights of fancy | ||
Ice clad continents | ||
The Simpson Desert | ||
1940, March | Vol 07 No 04 | The Museum and the cinema |
The Pearly Nautilus: a living fossil | ||
Insect habitat groups | ||
Maori carving | ||
Australian insects. VIII. Orthoptera: 3. Stick and leaf insects | ||
A new bird of paradise | ||
Mystery animals of Australia | ||
Australian shells. The Purples and their near relatives | ||
1940, June | Vol 07 No 05 | Peripatus |
Australian insects. IX. Orthoptera, 4. The locusts | ||
A nesting colony of sea birds on the Admiralty Isles | ||
The statistics of gold nuggets | ||
The carved trees of New South Wales | ||
Native art in international exhibitions | ||
Herbert James Carter | ||
Ambergris. Its uses and identification | ||
Australian shells. Bubble and allied shells | ||
A trumpeter with two mouths | ||
1940, September | Vol 07 No 06 | A message |
Aboriginal stone arrangements in Australia | ||
Snakes that fish | ||
New insect exhibits. Man's insect enemies in peace and war | ||
Minerals from Mount Isa, North West Queensland | ||
Australian shells. Ear and Siphon shells, brackish water slugs and snails | ||
Some strange and beautiful flies | ||
Furred aeronauts of night. Little bats as friends of Man | ||
Australian insects. X. Orthoptera, 5. The longhorned grasshoppers | ||
The first two-headed shark in Australia | ||
1940, December |
Vol 07 No 07 | Administrative changes |
Presentations to Dr. Anderson and Mr W T Wells | ||
The stone axes of Australia | ||
Animal parasites: the tapeworms | ||
School films | ||
The Mountain minnow | ||
Put to the swordfish | ||
Jivaro head trophies | ||
Vampire bats in fact and legend | ||
Window displays | ||
Australian insects. XI. Orthoptera, 6. The crickets | ||
1941, March | Vol 07 No 08 | The Small Cabbage White Butterfly |
Chipped stone implements of the aborigines | ||
Burramundi | ||
Australian insects. 7. Isoptera - the termites | ||
To the red heart of Australia | ||
New parts for old in the shellfish world | ||
The story of the diamond | ||
1941, July | Vol 07 No 09 | Capsules or girdles? |
Tess: a New South Wales police dog | ||
The Small Cabbage White Butterfly | ||
The food supply of the aborigines | ||
Australian aboriginal art | ||
The catfish and its kittens | ||
To the red heart of Australia. II. Erldunda to the Macdonnell Ranges | ||
Linked destinies | ||
1941, September | Vol 07 No 10 | Portrait of Alexander Macleay |
Aboriginal grindstones and mortars | ||
The Pterodactyls of the Mesozoic era. Nature's greatest flying machine | ||
'Photographic' fishes | ||
Australian insects. 8. Perlaria, the Stone-flies, and Embiaria, the web-spinners | ||
Any port in a storm | ||
The home of the diamond | ||
Butterflies and ants | ||
Porphyry, the purple stone of the ancients | ||
Australian aboriginal art and its application | ||
War on the Liver Fluke | ||
1941, December | Vol 07 No 11 | Guide to the museum collections |
Aboriginal ritual and mystery stones | ||
Uninvited guests | ||
Australian Water-rats: their origin and habits | ||
Australian insects. 15. Book-lice, lice and thrips | ||
New Parrotfish exhibits | ||
Harmful moth caterpillars | ||
Strange insect meals: an entomological by-way | ||
1942, March | Vol 07 No 12 | Museums today |
The story of Man | ||
The cycle of erosion | ||
An interesting New Guinea phasmid | ||
Animal plagues | ||
Australian insects. 16. The bugs, cicadas, etc - order Hemiptera | ||
The life-history of the Cup Moth Doratifera ochroptila Turner | ||
The Watering-pot shell | ||
Deepsea blackout | ||
Interesting meteorite additions to the Museum collections | ||
1942-1943 |
Volume 08 | Contents, Index |
1942, June |
Vol 08 No 01 | The Museum and morale |
Specimens and their history | ||
Sauntering around the Marches | ||
12-wired Bird of Paradise |
||
The story of Man | ||
The kangaroo family. Origin and earliest discoveries | ||
Fish are 'worm-conscious' | ||
Australian Insects. 17. The bugs - order Hemiptera-Heteroptera 1 | ||
The pygmy peoples of Oceania | ||
1942, September | Vol 08 No 02 | A notable gift to the nation |
The truth about marsupial birth | ||
A fall of meteorites at Forest Vale, New South Wales | ||
Marine parade. Forster, New South Wales | ||
Primitive Man and his larder | ||
Mosquitoes | ||
Jungle dwellers of the Malay Peninsula: the Ple-Temiar Senoi | ||
Australian insects. 18. Hemiptera, 3-Aradidae-Cimicidae | ||
Charles Davies Sherborn | ||
1943, January | Vol 08 03 | New Guinea |
Hunters and gardeners of New Guinea | ||
The furred animals of New Guinea | ||
The geology of New Guinea | ||
Some Papuan insects | ||
Some butterflies of the Papuan region | ||
Strange New Guinea beetles | ||
1943, April | Vol 08 No 04 | The Malcolm Stanley Collection of fossil insects |
Some New Guinea reptiles | ||
Malaria, New Guinea and us | ||
Collecting and preserving insects and their allies | ||
A deadly poisonous jellyfish | ||
A rare mineral | ||
Some arachnids and millipedes from New Guinea | ||
The 'Dawn Horse' and its progeny | ||
1943, July | Vol 08 No 05 | The child and the Museum |
A paradise for birds | ||
The shell-inlay decoration of the southern Solomon Islands | ||
The Hopping or Jerboa Marsupial Mice | ||
Collecting and preserving insects and their allies | ||
Lobster or crayfish? | ||
The kangaroo family. Rat kangaroos, 1. | ||
Australian insects. XIX. Hemiptera - 4. The bugs (Gelastocoridae-Corixidae) | ||
A new mineral record | ||
1943, December | Vol 08 No 06 | Aboriginal nomenclature |
The making of a bark canoe | ||
Australian insects. 20. Hemiptera - Homoptera, the cicadas | ||
A trip to Barrington Tops | ||
Bluebottle stings: a cure | ||
Pugheaded fishes | ||
Some butterfly-collecting problems | ||
The kangaroo family. Rat Kangaroos, 2 | ||
Geological relief model of the Blue Mountains and the Sydney district | ||
Sandflies | ||
An African devil mask | ||
1944, March | Vol 08 No 07 | A new order for our fauna |
Showy shells from the South Pacific | ||
The RJ Harris collection of medals | ||
The coconut palm and its uses in Oceania | ||
The kangaroo family - hare wallabies | ||
The Australian Museum Popular Science lectures | ||
Australian insects XX Hemiptera Hoptera, the cicadas | ||
A trip to the Barrington Tops Part 2 | ||
SWP Naturalists | ||
Holes and corners of seashore life | ||
1944, June | Vol 08 No 08 |
Museums and adult education |
Rare fishes | ||
Smoking and art in New Guinea | ||
Interesting sharks' eggs | ||
Prawns and prawning | ||
Review | ||
A water supply and its inhabitants | ||
Frogs and toads | ||
The kangaroo family - tree wallabies | ||
Australian insects XXI Homoptera 2, tree and leaf hoppers | ||
Notes and news | ||
1944, September | Vol 08 No 09 | Admiralty islands carvings |
Museum storage | ||
The art of the Admiralty Islands | ||
The kangaroo family - rock wallabies | ||
Tom Iredale | ||
Australian insects XXII Homoptera 3 - Psyllidae and Aphididae | ||
Charles Anderson | ||
Treatment of snake bite | ||
Keeping drinking water pure | ||
Baker's Creek Gorge | ||
The classification of Australian butterflies | ||
1944, December | Vol 08 No 10 | Northern or sandy nail-tail wallaby |
Australian poisonous snakes | ||
The wood carvers of the Admiralty Islands | ||
Australian insects XXIII Homoptera 4 - Snow-flies and Scale Insects | ||
Lights under the sea: jewelled squids | ||
Review | ||
The kangaroo family, the nail-tail wallabies | ||
Conservation of wild life. Total protection for all wallabies in Victoria | ||
Tropic Island memories | ||
Some butterflies of Australia and the Pacific: the Birdwing butterflies | ||
1945, March | Vol 08 No 11 | The extinct Giant Kangaroo |
Palorchestes, Australia's extinct Giant Kangaroo | ||
New spider model exhibits | ||
Fire without matches | ||
Argulus, an aquarium menace | ||
Australian insects XXIV, Coleoptera beetles | ||
Some Western Australian frogs | ||
A fishy monstrosity | ||
Exploring a coral island reef | ||
Some butterflies of Australia and the Pacific. The Birdwing butterflies II and Swallowtails I | ||
Notes and News |
||
1945, August | Vol 08 No 12 | Malangan from New Ireland |
The art of Malangan in New Ireland | ||
John Gilbert: centenary of his death | ||
Design among the echinoderms | ||
Australian insects XXV, Coleoptera 2 - the Tiger Beetles |
||
Adventures on a coral isle | ||
Some butterflies of Australia and the Pacific. The Swallowtails II | ||
Regalecus Regenerate: the oar fish again | ||
Molybdenite | ||
Notes and news | ||
1946-1949 | Volume 09 | Contents, Index |
1946, January | Vol 09 No 01 | The artistry of the Satin Bird |
Australian insects. 26. Coleoptera 2, the Carabs | ||
Sojourn on a coral isle | ||
Bivalve shells of a sandy ocean beach | ||
Passengers without passports | ||
Some strange interpretations of early-discovered fossils | ||
Some butterflies of Australia and the Pacific - the Swallowtails, 3 | ||
1946, April | Vol 09 No 02 | The Museum in teaching |
Denizens of the boom piles | ||
Obituary - Dr Jiri Piles | ||
Australian insects. 27. Coleoptera 4 - Water beetles | ||
The Malangan masks of New Ireland | ||
Lightning, meteorites and the atomic bomb | ||
Australian marine eels | ||
Some butterflies of Australia and the Pacific. The Swallowtails - 4 |
||
1946, July | Vol 09 No 03 | Spheroidal granites |
Australian insects. 28. Coleoptera 5 - the whirligig beetles | ||
Melanesian kapkaps | ||
Chaetopterus- a strange and beautiful worm | ||
Scorpions | ||
Birds of a tropic isle | ||
Some butterflies of Australia and the Pacific. The Swallowtails- 5 |
||
1947, January | Vol 09 No 04 | Rhina, the shark ray |
A raft of fish eggs | ||
Native commerce in Oceania | ||
The Solomon Islands' Ndala (Kap Kap) | ||
"For their work continueth" | ||
Bivalve shells of a tidal flat | ||
Australian insects. 29. Coleoptera 6 - Paussidae, Cupidae, and Rhysodidae | ||
The endless house-hunt | ||
Some butterflies of Australia and the Pacific. the Swallowtails |
||
How fossils speak to Man | ||
The true sea-slug - Onchidium | ||
1947, May | Vol 09 No 05 | The AD Combe mineral collection |
Native commerce in Oceania | ||
Australian insects. 30. Coleoptera 7- the Hydrophilidae | ||
Bivalve shells of a tidal flat, 2 | ||
Kangaroo twins - and triplets | ||
Some sea animals that sting and bite | ||
Long Toms | ||
Some ticks harmful to dogs in Australia | ||
1947, September | Vol 09 No 06 | The antiquity of man in Australia, I |
Coral-built land | ||
The Shepherd Fish and its flock | ||
Australian insects. 31. Coleoptera 8 - the Cucujidae | ||
Rocks in the making | ||
Left or right turn | ||
Questions I've been asked | ||
Museums and the work of UNESCO | ||
1948, January | Vol 09 No 07 | Museums in UNESCO programme |
The antiquity of Man in Australia. Part 2 | ||
Tubrabucca, Barrington Tops - the Northern End | ||
Sydney Coral is a worm! | ||
Australian insects. XXXII. Coleoptera 9 - the Colydiidae | ||
Some founders of Australian fish science | ||
Australian Museum science lectures | ||
Footprints in the sands of time | ||
The Giant Herring | ||
1948, July | Vol 09 No 08 | The aims of UNESCO |
The Oil Fish in Australia | ||
Deserters from the sea | ||
New meteorites from New South Wales | ||
Australian insects. 33. Coleoptera 10 - the Trogositidae | ||
Some butterflies of Australia and the Pacific.Family Danaidae - Danaids 1 | ||
Marine cave wonderland | ||
Stomach contents of tiger sharks, Galeocerdo, reported from the Pacific and Indian Oceans |
||
1948, October | Vol 09 No 09 | HMS Endeavour Bark |
Hitchikers of the sea | ||
The marsupial banded anteater or numbat | ||
Australian insects 34. Coleoptera 2 | ||
A rare squid | ||
Some butterflies of Australia and the Pacific | ||
Fossil hunting 'west of the Darling' and a visit to Lake Callabonna | ||
Hallo, young naturalists! | ||
1949, January | Vol 09 No 10 | The progress of science |
Crangon, the noisy Pistol Prawn | ||
Seabird mortality | ||
The Brachiopods, sheeled sea creatures | ||
Two crustacean oddities | ||
Fish doctor' in Papua | ||
Australian insects. 35. Coleopatra 12 - the fungus beetles | ||
Bird notes | ||
1949, April | Vol 09 No 11 | The designers of the Huon Gulf, New Guinea |
The peregrine or Black-cheeked Falcon | ||
Australian insects. 36. Coleoptera 13 | ||
The Giant African slug - a crop-destroying traveller | ||
Flounders and soles | ||
Spiders harmful to Man | ||
How to make a formicarium | ||
New aids to insect collecting | ||
1949, July | Vol 09 No 12 | "Thar she blows!" Whaling in Antarctic seas |
The Handfish | ||
The lizards of Eastlakes Gold Links | ||
Australian insects. 37. Coleoptera 14 | ||
Spiders harmful to Man. 2. | ||
When the rains come | ||
1949-1952 | Volume 10 | Contents, Index |
1949, December | Vol 10 No 01 | Sepik River face mask |
Edward Jenner and the conquest of smallpox | ||
A large Medusa in Sydney Harbour | ||
Sucking fishes | ||
Natural history of stamps | ||
The snakes of Eastlakes Golf Links | ||
Mining old and new in Western New South Wales | ||
Australian insects. XXXVIII Coleoptera 15- Herteroceridae, Lathridiidae, and Endomychidae |
||
Review | ||
1950, March | Vol 10 No 02 | Butterfly cod |
Giant sea scorpions of the past | ||
Land shells of Australia. Part I | ||
The Wood-Swallows | ||
A molluscan 'Moby Dick' | ||
Fishing with the hand.'Tickling Trout' and other fishes in Great Britain, 1602-1943 | ||
Australian insects. XXXIX Coleoptera 16 - Ladybirds | ||
Reviews | ||
Notes and news | ||
1950, September | Vol 10 No 03 | UNESCO and museums |
The Taipan | ||
The Opah or Moonfish in Australasia | ||
Obituary. Gustavius Athol Waterhouse | ||
Land shells of Australia. Part 2 | ||
Geological Curiosities. Part I | ||
Earthworms and soil-building in Australia |
||
Bandicoots: rare and otherwise. Part I | ||
Australian insects. XL Coleoptera 17 - Corylophidae and Dermestidae | ||
Notes and news | ||
1950, December | Vol 10 No 04 | A new exhibit - the Black Cockatoo group |
Australia's oldest fossils. The Winged-snail, Biconulites, and the Archaeocyathinae Sponges |
||
Bandicoots: rare and otherwise. Part 2 | ||
Spider aeronauts and gossamer web | ||
Clingfishes | ||
Geological curiosities. Part 2 | ||
Australian insects, XLI. Coleoptera, 18 - Byrrhids, Histerids, and Silphids | ||
A large stargazer | ||
Reviews | ||
1951, March | Vol 10 No 05 | The human sculptures of the Solomon Islands |
Trawlermen's rubbish | ||
A strange extinct marsupial of great size from Queensland | ||
The satellite of sharks | ||
The mystery of the "limestone" caves in National Park | ||
A naturalist at North West Cape | ||
Australian Insects, XLIII. Coleoptera, 20 - Pselaphidae and Trichopterygidae | ||
Obituary. Dr Bertram Lindsay Middleton | ||
Review | ||
Notes and news | ||
1951, June | Vol 10 No 06 | The Scotia Blacks |
Meet the flatworms | ||
Australian Insects, XLIII. Coleoptera, 20 - Pselaphidae and Trichopterygidae | ||
The human sculptures of the Solomon Islands - 2 | ||
More about Wood-swallows | ||
Wealth in coral gravels | ||
The eagle stands accused | ||
Tracks in the sand | ||
Introduced fishes - 2 | ||
Aftermath of rain | ||
Reviews | ||
Popular lecture syllabus | ||
Cinema screenings | ||
1951, September | Vol 10 No 07 | The burning cloud of Mt Lamington |
Mutton birds | ||
Australian Insects, XLIV. Coleoptera, 21 - Fireflies | ||
The kangaroo family : the pademelons or scrubwallabies - I | ||
Somnath rises again | ||
An insect calendar | ||
Maori wood carvings | ||
Introduced fishes - 2 | ||
Obituary. Professor Thomas Harvey Johnston | ||
Notes and news | ||
1951, December | Vol 10 No 08 | Christmas beetles |
Flatheads | ||
Aboriginal rain-makers and their ways. Part I | ||
An insect calendar. Part 2. [Spring, Summer] | ||
The kangaroo family: the pademelons or scrubwallabies - Part 2 | ||
A marine curiosity | ||
The Snowy Mountains of New South Wales. Part I | ||
Te Baitari: an edible jellyfish from Tarawa | ||
Reviews | ||
1952, March | Vol 10 No 09 | The Tasmanian or Marsupial Devil: its habits and family life |
The Lepakshi murals | ||
Some forest migrants | ||
Australian insects, XLV. Coloeptera, 22 - Telephoridae and Lycidae | ||
A Werpoo, or bone dagger, from South Australia | ||
The Sir William Dixson collection | ||
An insect calendar. Part 3. [Autumn, Winter] | ||
The Snowy Mountains of New South Wales, Part 2 | ||
A notable Aboriginal | ||
Aboriginal rain-makers and their ways. Part 2 | ||
Review | ||
1952, June | Vol 10 No 10 | Museum expedition to Central and North-West Australia |
The common names of fishes | ||
Australian insects, XLVI. Coleoptera, 23 - Malachiidae and Dasytidae | ||
A note on soldier beetles | ||
Folklore of the coconut | ||
The largest sand dunes in the world | ||
Cinema Screenings, 1952 | ||
Breast-plates: the blackfellows' reward | ||
Beachcombers' harvest | ||
Amateur lapidaries | ||
1952, September | Vol 10 No 11 | Birds of the New South Wales Mallee |
The shells of rivers and lakes - I | ||
Porcupine fishes | ||
Long journey made by an oar blade | ||
Line fishing for moths | ||
Sea foam, an unsolved problem of the seashore | ||
Australian insects, XLVII. Coleoptera, 24 - The Cleridae | ||
Broken Hill - I | ||
Obituary. Keith Collingwood McKeown | ||
Review |
||
1952, December | Vol 10 No 12 | The Australian Museum scientific expedition to Central and North-west Australia |
Adventures with the Centralian birds | ||
Shrimps: an Ayer's Rock mystery | ||
Broken Hill - II | ||
The shells of rivers and lakes | ||
An outline classification of Australian fishes | ||
Just what do fishes eat? | ||
Review | ||
1953-1955 | Volume 11 | Contents, Index |
1953, March | Vol 11 No 01 | We visit the Forrest River |
Seasonal occurance of cicadas | ||
Sea lice or jellyfish? | ||
Purse-net fishing in Arnhem Land | ||
Gurnards | ||
The shells of rivers and lakes - 3 | ||
Reviews | ||
1953, June | Vol 11 No 02 | With the Australian Museum Expedition to the Northern Territory. 1. From Alice Springs to the Granites |
Stones that walk | ||
Port Keats | ||
Cinema screenings, 1953 | ||
New South Wales opal fields. 1. White Cliffs | ||
Toadfish poisoning | ||
Notes and news | ||
Mineralogical Expedition | ||
1953, September | Vol 11 No 03 | With the Australian Museum Expedition to Central and North-West Australia. 2.The Tanami goldfield |
The Anglerfish, Lophius piscatorius | ||
New South Wales opal fields. 2. Lightning Ridge | ||
Our marsupial "Native Cat" | ||
Mineral fields of the Broken Hill district. 1.The Euriowie group mines | ||
The whale's tooth Tambua of Fiji | ||
Stocking your vivarium | ||
1953, December | Vol 11 No 04 | A Toradja house |
New shark exhibits | ||
Aboriginal rock-paintings of the South Coast | ||
Marine stingers | ||
Bali: Emerald gem of the Indies, I | ||
The mysterious hairtail | ||
The Kurrajong, its history and natural history, I | ||
Films at the Museum | ||
1954, March | Vol 11 No 05 | Princess Elizabeth Land |
Bali: emerald gem of the Indies, 2 | ||
Some freshwater gudgeons, mainly from tropical Australia | ||
The Mootwingee Range | ||
Exhibition of school work at the Museum | ||
The Kurrajong, its history and natural history, II | ||
The marsupial "Tiger Cat" | ||
1954, June | Vol 11 No 06 | Palolo: food worm of the Pacific |
The introduced grey slug | ||
A glimpse into the past : field investigations in the 'nineties' at Shea's Creek, near Sydney |
||
Pounamu and Tangiwai : the greenstone of New Zealand | ||
Goggle-eyed mangrove fish | ||
Popular Science Lectures - 1954 series | ||
Bali: emerald gem of the Indies, III | ||
Snake with fungoid growth | ||
Are Hussars edible? | ||
The marsupial 'Tiger Cat': birth and growth in captivity | ||
A shy nocturnal prowler | ||
Death of General Sir Charles Rosenthal | ||
1954, September | Vol 11 No 07 | Appointment of Dr JW Evans as Director of the Museum |
Pounamu and Tangiwai : the greenstone of New Zealand. Part 2 | ||
A man and a museum - Sir Hans Sloane, Bart | ||
"Face lift" for Museum's Giant Sloth | ||
Fossil remains from Wombeyan Caves | ||
Photography in the field: hints on equipment for the naturalist | ||
An elusive jellyfish from fresh water | ||
Tasmania's west coast mineral localities. I.Mount Lyell | ||
Insects of Captain Cook's expedition | ||
1954, December | Vol 11 No 08 | Dr. AB Walkom retires |
Jenolan sanctuary | ||
Giant marsupial remains at Brewarrina, New South Wales | ||
Buffalo hunting in Arnhem Land | ||
Museum work in the New Guinea highlands | ||
Fishes from the Gulf of Carpentaria | ||
Gigantic Australian implements | ||
Tasmania's west coast mineral localities. II.Zeehan and Dundas | ||
Insects of Captain Cook's expedition. Part 2 | ||
School vacation film programme | ||
Education Week Poster Competition | ||
1955, March | Vol 11 No 09 | The Kraken - legendary terror of the seas |
Saving the Green Turtle of the Great Barrier Reef | ||
Aboriginal turtle hunters | ||
Bather's itch, or schistosome dermatitis | ||
The Australian Museum's marlins | ||
Collecting on an Australian Museum expeditions | ||
"Magic fern," or sea cypris | ||
How Eskimos live in the Arctic | ||
Insects of Captain Cook's expedition. Part 3 | ||
1955, June | Vol 11 No 10 | Australian Territory in Antarctica - the new "Mawson" base |
Popular Science lectures - 1955 series | ||
Grooves in the rocks | ||
Spheroidal rock mass | ||
Shell shapes |
||
Insects of Captain Cook's expedition. Part 4 | ||
Vale - Nancy B Adams | ||
Uranium in New England | ||
The largest (and the smallest) Australasian fishes | ||
One Tree Island - remote outpost of the Capricorns | ||
Collecting and preserving insects and their allies | ||
An insect dealer resigns in despair | ||
1955, September | Vol 11 No 11 | Museum developments |
Tasmanian seashores | ||
The first birds appear on earth | ||
Conservation of freshwater fishes and shoreline fauna | ||
Collecting and preserving insects and their allies | ||
Arnhem Land baskets | ||
More about the Kraken | ||
Notes and news |
||
1955, December | Vol 11 No 12 | Sailfish ahoy! |
Squirter earthworms | ||
Travertine | ||
Collecting and preserving insects and their allies | ||
Pyrosoma plagues in surf | ||
The koala | ||
School children and the Museum | ||
Damage to rock engravings | ||
Coral paradise of One Tree Island | ||
School vacation film programmes | ||
1956-1958 | Volume 12 | Contents, Index |
1956, March | Vol 12 No 01 | Field trip to northwestern New South Wales |
Exploring between tidemarks. 1. Zonation | ||
Bird life of Warrah and the North Hawkesbury | ||
The races of man in Oceania | ||
Collecting and preserving insects and their allies | ||
Collectors' items : volute shells of the genus Amoria | ||
1956, June | Vol 12 No 02 | Ancient armoured fishes discovered at Canowindra, NSW |
Introducing frogs and toads | ||
Popular Science lectures: 1956 series | ||
Exploring between tidemarks. 2. Adaptations of seashore animals |
||
A 'barking' crayfish | ||
The races of man in Oceania | ||
Migration in Australian birds | ||
Nature's contrasting moods west of the Darling | ||
Notes and news | ||
1956, September | Vol 12 No 03 | Fungal life |
"Caroline," the Fluttering Shearwater, comes ashore | ||
Some ancient bugs | ||
Nature quiz | ||
Trigonia - a living fossil | ||
Book note | ||
Meteorites and the Earth | ||
Miss Joyce Allan retires | ||
Life history of the Freshwater Eel | ||
Notes and news | ||
An ancient reef-building coral | ||
Exploring between tidemarks. 3. Seashore animals and their feeding | ||
1956, December | Vol 12 No 04 |
The ancient seas of Australia |
Films for schoolchildren | ||
Australian flowering plants | ||
Book review | ||
The peopling of Southeastern Australia | ||
Australian mammals | ||
Retirement of Mr JR Kinghorn | ||
Australian birds | ||
Australian insects | ||
The Great Barrier Reef | ||
1957, March | Vol 12 No 05 | A kennel of frogfishes |
Nature quiz | ||
An apology for snakes | ||
An archaeologist in Western New South Wales | ||
Oil in Australia | ||
Casting a fish in plaster |
||
The Museum | ||
Adaptive radiation of trapdoor spiders | ||
Exploring between the tidemarks. 4. Some animal communities of rocky shores | ||
Book reviews | ||
Popular Science lecture |
||
1957, June | Vol 12 No 06 | Pioneering in concology |
The Coucal or Swamp-Pheasant | ||
Australia's fiery rain | ||
The kangaroo family: brush wallabies | ||
Nature Quiz | ||
Photographs minus backgrounds | ||
Notes and news | ||
Exploring between the tidemarks. 5. Hints to shore explorers | ||
Aboriginal rock engravings in a Mosman garden | ||
Book review | ||
Popular Science lecture | ||
1957, September | Vol 12 No 07 | The causes of locust outbreaks |
Monarch of the lakes | ||
Frogs of the Sydney region | ||
Museum preparator' conference | ||
Whence Australia's mantle of green? | ||
Nature Quiz | ||
Some huntsmen spiders | ||
A primitive ornithology | ||
Notes and news | ||
The kangaroo family : kangaroos and wallaroos | ||
A simple photographic method of copying a drawing | ||
1957, December | Vol 12 No 08 | Antarctica - a vital link in the International Geophysic Year |
The Antarctic continent | ||
Mineral possibilities of the Antarctic | ||
The wildlife of Macquarie Island | ||
School vacation film programmes | ||
Antarctic birds | ||
Whales and the Antarctic | ||
Teeming life in Antarctic seas | ||
The distribution of animals and plants of the Southern Hemisphere | ||
Notes and news items | ||
1958, March | Vol 12 No 09 | The Ghost Pipefish |
The Moonfish or Opah in New South Wales | ||
String figures of Australia | ||
The Honey Mouse | ||
The Monotremes | ||
The Mallee Fowl | ||
Wasps. Part I | ||
Land of the tree-climbing snails | ||
Marine giants past and present | ||
Nature Quiz | ||
Book review | ||
Notes and news items | ||
1958, June | Vol 12 No 10 | Salt manufacture and trading in the Western Highlands of New Guinea |
Nature Quiz | ||
Notes and news items | ||
Adaptive convergence in Australian reptiles | ||
Linnaeus and zoology | ||
The Australian prawn industry | ||
Recent studies on the Tasmanian mutton-bird | ||
Giant earthworms | ||
Retirement of Mr Ellis Troughton | ||
Book reviews | ||
1958, September | Vol 12 No 11 | Australian geckoes |
The magpie goose | ||
The Thylacine | ||
Observing ants in artificial nests | ||
Fossils and their value in stratigraphy | ||
The freshwater aquarium | ||
Nesting seasons of some Australian birds | ||
Notes and news items | ||
Book review | ||
Test your knowledge | ||
1958, December | Vol 12 No 12 | New Guinea: physical geography and environment |
Notes and news | ||
Geology of the Island of New Guinea | ||
New Guinea vegetation | ||
Book review | ||
Birds of New Guinea | ||
New Guinea's fishes | ||
New Guinea insects | ||
Peoples of New Guinea | ||
1959-1961 | Volume 13 | Contents, Index |
1959, March | Vol 13 No 01 | Observations on the behaviour of sea urchins |
New wing to be built at Museum | ||
Fauna preservation faces a crucial period | ||
The cultivation of Australian native plants | ||
The Huntsman spider - its habits and life history | ||
Do you know the answer? | ||
Notes and news | ||
New Zealand, land of unique animals | ||
Stencils of the Aboriginals | ||
Naturalists' Society's 58th anniversary | ||
"Crabs' eyes" were a mediaeval "cure-all" | ||
The mineral wealth of north-west Queensland | ||
Obituary. William Alfred Rainbow | ||
1959, June | Vol 13 No 02 | Sea-snakes |
Dolphins and porpoises | ||
Lectures at the Museum | ||
A giant marine reptile from the Cretaceous rocks of Queensland | ||
Birds - and their observers | ||
New exhibit of invertebrates | ||
The barramundi, north Australia's finest food fish | ||
Flesh-eating plants | ||
A class in the Museum's Hallstrom Theatre | ||
The syncarid crustacea, a living link with remote geological ages | ||
The life and habits of the sawfly | ||
Obituary: RE Baxter | ||
1959, September | Vol 13 No 03 | Australian goannas |
Head-hunters of Oceania | ||
Relict animals and plants of the Macdonnell Ranges | ||
New cave-dwelling shrimps found | ||
Fire and brimstone | ||
Notes and news | ||
These shellfish are good to eat | ||
A museum expedition to the Hamersley Range | ||
The way of life of the slater | ||
Obituary. Anthony Musgrave | ||
1959, December | Vol 13 No 04 | The life and work of Charles Darwin |
Darwin and the evolution of Man | ||
The "Invertebrate Tree" | ||
Some Australian barnacles | ||
Charles Darwin in Australia | ||
Special Darwin exhibit | ||
Genetics and evolution | ||
New technique used in Museum exhibit | ||
The role of islands in evolution | ||
Neopilina - a molluscan missing link | ||
Notes and news | ||
Book reviews | ||
1960, March | Vol 13 No 05 | Kalgoorlie - El Dorado of the West |
The numbat of south-western Australia | ||
Ancestor worship among the Melanesians | ||
The unique plants and animals of south-western Australia | ||
Book review | ||
The migrations of fishes | ||
Fossil insect research | ||
Thylacoleo, the extinct marsupial lion | ||
Gall and predaceous wasps | ||
Flatworm eggs | ||
1960, June | Vol 13 No 06 | The bird habitats of Botany Bay |
Koala management in Victoria | ||
Dangerous marine animals | ||
A remarkable parasite of the long-fingered bat | ||
The evolution and radiation of mammals | ||
Corroboree frog | ||
Turtles of the past | ||
Mayflies | ||
The Vertebrate Tree | ||
Crocodiles and their kin | ||
1960, September | Vol 13 No 07 | The natural history of Lord Howe Island |
Underwater saboteurs | ||
Freshwater crayfishes | ||
Premier opens Museum's new building | ||
The Australian Bird-banding Scheme, 1953-60 | ||
Some aspects of the life of the termite | ||
The "double-headed" caterpillar | ||
A million years on the Darling Downs | ||
The possum in New Zealand | ||
1960, December | Vol 13 No 08 | The birds of Sydney |
The mammals of the Sydney district | ||
Snakes, lizards and chelonians | ||
Fossils of the Sydney district | ||
Colourful plant life on sandstone and shale | ||
The geology of the Sydney district | ||
Sydney: topography and settlement | ||
Rich and varied insect fauna | ||
1961, March | Vol 13 No 09 | Gemstones of Australia |
New aboriginal exhibits at the Museum | ||
The Robber Crab - a crustacean mystery | ||
The Blue Wren | ||
Uses of radioactivity in entomology and insect pest control | ||
Fossil insects | ||
Trigger plants | ||
Freak fishes | ||
Land and freshwater invertebrates of the Sydney area | ||
William Holmes, the Australian Museum's first custodian | ||
1961, June | Vol 13 No 10 | Whale marking |
Absorption of solar heat by carpet snakes | ||
Magpie goose behaviour | ||
Aboriginal relics of the Hawkesbury sandstone | ||
Earwigs | ||
The radiocarbon dating method | ||
Protection of rare fauna | ||
The freshwater gudgeons of temperate Australia | ||
New museum technique for displaying softbodied animals | ||
The White-stemmed Gum Moth | ||
1961, September | Vol 13 No 11 | The boomerang |
Insect migration | ||
Retirement of Museum curator | ||
Vampire bats - true and false | ||
How to recognise meteorites | ||
An expedition to Cape York Peninsula | ||
The voracious piranha of South America | ||
Notes and news | ||
Pollination of the Proteaceae |
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1961, December | Vol 13 No 12 | Hill End - then and now |
New Zealand greenstone | ||
Pearls, the jewels of the sea | ||
Andamooka opal field | ||
Mintibi - opal field of the future | ||
World's largest pitchblende specimen at Museum | ||
Radioactive minerals | ||
Recent trends in oil exploration in Australia | ||
Ornamental stones of New South Wales | ||
Victorian goldfields |