Show
40 citations
related to Specimen exchange
Show
40 citations
related to Specimen exchange as a subject or category
Description Term used during the period 2002-present
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
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
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
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
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/)
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
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
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
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
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/)
Article
Sooyoung An
(2020)
Daniel Hanbury's Study of Chinese Materia Medica: A British Network of Letters and Specimens During the Nineteenth Century.
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
(pp. 359-380).
(/isis/citation/CBB038602873/)
Article
Adriana T. A. Martins Keuller
(2019)
Physiology Studies and Scientific Exchange in the Anthropology Laboratory of the National Museum of Rio de Janeiro (1910s–1920s).
History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences
(p. 22).
(/isis/citation/CBB937159432/)
Book
Arthur MacGregor
(2019)
Company Curiosities: Nature, Culture and the East India Company, 1600–1874.
(/isis/citation/CBB007862581/)
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