Show
43 citations
related to Specimen exchange
Show
43 citations
related to Specimen exchange as a subject or category
Description Term used during the period 2002-present
Book
Carey McCormack
(2024)
Claiming Indigenous Plant Knowledge: From Botanical Exchanges to Resource Extraction in the Indian Ocean World.
(/isis/citation/CBB198718162/)
Book
Kathleen S. Murphy
(2023)
Captivity's Collections: Science, Natural History, and the British Transatlantic Slave Trade.
(/isis/citation/CBB254772233/)
Article
Jack Ashby
(2023)
How collections and reputation were built out of Tasmanian violence: Thylacines (Thylacinus cynocephalus) and Aboriginal remains from Morton Allport (1830–1878).
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 244-264).
(/isis/citation/CBB983226557/)
Article
Karl Schulze-Hagen; Tim R. Birkhead
(2023)
“Der fluglose Alk”: Johann Friedrich Naumann’s 1844 account of Pinguinus impennis (great auk).
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 304-324).
(/isis/citation/CBB688828890/)
Article
Guy M. Sechrist
(2023)
Wooden barrels for transporting and preserving natural history specimens in the eighteenth century.
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 325-336).
(/isis/citation/CBB364588480/)
Article
Brendan Tuttle
(2023)
Solomon Col Adol (1909–1971), Game Ranger and animal collector in Bor, South Sudan.
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 49-66).
(/isis/citation/CBB632796920/)
Article
Mark F. Watson
(2023)
“Bharat Singh’s Stuffed Otter”: Discovery in 1818 of Ailurus fulgens, the Himalayan red panda.
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 85-100).
(/isis/citation/CBB885926141/)
Article
Rebecca Machin
(2022)
Mo Koundje (“Mok”): The life of a western lowland gorilla (c.1929–1938).
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 1-11).
(/isis/citation/CBB891332031/)
Article
Katja Kaiser
(2022)
Duplicate networks: The Berlin botanical institutions as a ‘clearing house’ for colonial plant material, 1891–1920.
British Journal for the History of Science
(pp. 279-296).
(/isis/citation/CBB759823770/)
Article
Catherine A. Nichols
(2022)
Curating duplicates: Operationalizing similiarity in the Smithsonian Institution with Haida rattles, 1880–1926.
British Journal for the History of Science
(pp. 341-363).
(/isis/citation/CBB294813381/)
Thesis
Sophie Tunney
(2022)
The Lost and Forgotten Plants: French Botanical Networks in Provincial and Colonial France (1760–1825).
(/isis/citation/CBB633575025/)
Article
Victoria Dickenson
(2021)
‘Obliging and curious’: Taylor White (1701–1772) and his remarkable collections.
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
(pp. 515-541).
(/isis/citation/CBB107547187/)
Article
Eleanor Larsson
(2021)
“On Deposit”: animal acquisition at the Zoological Society of London, 1870–1910 (Patron's review).
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 1-21).
(/isis/citation/CBB855639307/)
Article
Stanislav Strekopytov
(2021)
Corrosive sublimate and its introduction as an insecticide for preserving natural history specimens in the eighteenth century.
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 22-41).
(/isis/citation/CBB822706431/)
Article
Lea Beiermann
(2021)
‘A method for safe transmission’: The microscope slides of the American Postal Microscopical Club.
British Journal for the History of Science
(pp. 403-422).
(/isis/citation/CBB584024838/)
Article
Lyle Fearnley
(September 2020)
Viral Sovereignty or Sequence Etiquette? Asian Science, Open Data, and Knowledge Control in Global Virus Surveillance.
East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal
(pp. 479-505).
(/isis/citation/CBB925083175/)
Article
Simon Ville; Claire Wright; Jude Philp
(2020)
Macleay’s Choice: Transacting the Natural History Trade in the Nineteenth Century.
Journal of the History of Biology
(pp. 345-375).
(/isis/citation/CBB456527142/)
Article
Kathleen Susan Murphy
(2020)
James Petiver's ‘Kind Friends’ and ‘Curious Persons’ in the Atlantic World: Commerce, Colonialism and Collecting.
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
(pp. 259-274).
(/isis/citation/CBB373646855/)
Article
Charles E. Jarvis
(2020)
‘The Most Common Grass, Rush, Moss, Fern, Thistles, Thorns or Vilest Weeds You Can Find’: James Petiver's Plants.
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
(pp. 303-328).
(/isis/citation/CBB461853022/)
Article
Caroline Cornish; Patricia Allan; Lauren Gardiner; et al.
(2020)
Between Metropole and Province: Circulating botany in British museums, 1870–1940.
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 124-146).
(/isis/citation/CBB395803983/)
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