Collection, preservation and illustration of animals

Área de elementos

Taxonomía

Código

Nota(s) sobre el alcance

    Nota(s) sobre el origen

      Mostrar nota(s)

        Términos jerárquicos

        Collection, preservation and illustration of animals

          Términos equivalentes

          Collection, preservation and illustration of animals

            Términos asociados

            Collection, preservation and illustration of animals

              61 Descripción archivística results for Collection, preservation and illustration of animals

              61 resultados directamente relacionados Excluir términos relacionados
              Edwards, Alphonse Milne-
              SEC/7/13/19 · Unidad documental compuesta · 1866-1870
              Parte de ZSL Secretaries

              Letters from Alphonse Milne-Edwards, Director of the Menagerie au Museum d'histoire naturelle, to Philip Lutley Sclater

              Peters, Wilhelm Carl Hartwig
              SEC/7/16/18 · Unidad documental compuesta · 1869-1871
              Parte de ZSL Secretaries

              Letters from Wilhelm Carl Hartwig Peters of the Museum Regium Zoologicum, to Philip Lutley Sclater regarding Huxley's paper, a sketch of the plan of the monkey house, plates, specimens in his possession, and his memoirs

              Museum Book
              VET/3/6/4 · Unidad documental simple · 1980s-1990s?
              Parte de Veterinary and pathology

              Lists specimens sent to the Natural History Museum

              ZSL Museum
              MUS · Fondo · 1833-1852

              It was proposed in the setting up of ZSL that there would be a museum for zoological specimens, and items began being collected c.1827 including a collection of Sumatran specimens donated by Lady Sophia Raffles, widow of ZSL founder Sir Stamford Raffles. The museum was housed firstly within our office building at 33 Bruton Street in central London, and charged entry for people to visit. Many specimens were donated by fellows, John Gould donated his collection of Himalayan birds in 1831 to the museum, for example. The museum proved very popular, and grew at such a rate that it was one of the reasons for moving office to Leicester square. It was decided that the Society either needed to purchase a dedicated building for it - or to disperse the collection. ZSL Council chose the latter, and by 1855 the collection had been dispersed to various other collections including the British Museum (Natural History) and Norwich Museum.

              Sin título
              Notes on the ZSL Museum
              MUS/4 · Unidad documental compuesta · 1849-1852
              Parte de ZSL Museum

              Includes: Report on the value of the Reserved Collection, 1851; Dr Crisp. Museum Stores; List of Animals Presented to the Norwich Collection; Catalogue of specimens of cruise, 1849; etc. Also includes printed extracts from the Annual Reports regarding the Museum, and a printed petition to the Chancellor of the Exchequer to buy the collection. The Dr Crisp item is a list of articles purchased by him from the Museum, including the skin of a giraffe. 

              Annotated British Museum Catalogues
              NZSL/HOD/1/4 · Unidad documental compuesta · 1844-1863
              Parte de Non-ZSL Collections

              "List of the Specimens of Mammalia in the Collection of the British Museum.", 1843. Copy signed by Hodgson. Not annotated. "List of the Specimens of Birds in the Collection of the British Museum. Part I - Accipitres.", 1844. Copy signed by Hodgson. Not annotated. "Catalogue of the Specimens of Mammalia in the Collection of the British Museum. Part III. Ungulata furcipeda.", 1852. Copy annotated by Hodgson. "Catalogue of the Specimens and Drawings of Mammals, Birds, Reptiles, and Fishes of Nepal and Tibet, presented by B.H. Hodgson, Esq., to the British Museum. Second Edition.", 1863. Three copies annotated by Hodgson.

              Barbour, Thomas
              CUR/3/1/4 · Unidad documental compuesta · 1922-1924
              Parte de Curators and Keepers

              Letters from Thomas Barbour of the Museum of Comparative Zoology in Cambridge Massachusetts, regarding anoles and Joan Procter's paper on Loveridge's Tortoise, her appointment at the Zoological Society of London, lost reprints, and the Zoological Record