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Resources for the History of Science in the Libraries of the British Museum (Natural History)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2009
Extract
Alfred Waterhouse's ornate Romanesque building at South Kensington, London, has contained the natural history collections of the British Museum since 1881. First opened to the public on Easter Monday, 18 April, in that year, the British Museum (Natural History) (BM(NH)) has become well-known for the excellence of its exhibition galleries, particularly for its dinosaurs, blue whale, and, more recently, for its revolutionary Hall of Human Biology.
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- Collections XIV
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- Copyright
- Copyright © British Society for the History of Science 1988
References
1 The Will of Sir Hans Shane, Bart, deceased. London, 1753.Google Scholar
2 Report from the Superintendent of the Departments of Natural History to the Trustees of the British Museum. 10 02 1859.Google Scholar
3 Sherborn, C. D., Index animalium, London, 1902–1932.Google Scholar
4 Ingles, J. M., and Sawyer, F.C., ‘A catalogue of the Richard Owen collection of palaeontological and zoological drawings in the British Museum (Natural History, Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) Historical Series’, (1979) 6,: 109–197.Google Scholar
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