Your search returned 39 results
By Page Type
By Tag
- All
- fish (907)
- fishes of sydney harbour (399)
- blog (231)
- insect (124)
- Blog (121)
- archives (116)
- AMRI (107)
- Fish (83)
- International collections (77)
- wildlife of sydney (77)
- Labridae (75)
- podcast (74)
- staff (69)
- geoscience (62)
- First Nations (59)
- AMplify (54)
- ichthyology (52)
- past exhibitions (50)
- people (50)
- earth sciences (48)
- Pomacentridae (45)
- Gobiidae (43)
- Indonesia (43)
- Serranidae (43)
- history (42)
- staff profile (42)
- bird (41)
- past exhibition (41)
- shark (41)
- exhibitions (40)
- Earth and Environmental Science (39)
- Syngnathidae (39)
- dangerous australians (39)
- death (39)
- Chaetodontidae (38)
- Bali (37)
- Eureka Prizes (36)
- australia's extinct animals (35)
- invertebrate guide (35)
- geological processes (34)
- frog (32)
- Ancient Egypt (31)
- Carangidae (30)
- Digivol (30)
- megafauna (30)
- minerals (30)
- Anthropology (29)
- Birds (28)
- Monacanthidae (28)
- geology (28)
-
My options after death
https://australianmuseum.net.au/about/history/exhibitions/death-the-last-taboo/my-options-after-death/The options currently available to people in Australia after their deaths are burial (in the earth or water) and cremation. There are many variations on the type and cost of the container and the final destination for the body or ashes.
-
Mourning - an introduction
https://australianmuseum.net.au/about/history/exhibitions/death-the-last-taboo/mourning-an-introduction/Cultures mourn and celebrate death in different ways. Explore this diversity and the ways people remember their dead. Read about the way people prefer to dispose of their bodies and to be remembered.
-
Disposing of the dead - Preservation
https://australianmuseum.net.au/about/history/exhibitions/death-the-last-taboo/disposing-of-the-dead-preservation/The earliest deliberately preserved bodies are those of the Chinchorro culture of northern Chile which date back about 7000 years. Today, the preserved bodies of famous political leaders, such as Lenin and Mao Tse Teung, demonstrate the continuing urge to defy death in some way.
-
Preparation for death: stories
https://australianmuseum.net.au/about/history/exhibitions/death-the-last-taboo/preparation-for-death-stories/Read about how these people from different cultures prepare the bodies of their dead.
-
Decomposition - Forensic Evidence
https://australianmuseum.net.au/about/history/exhibitions/death-the-last-taboo/decomposition-forensic-evidence/The presence of animals on a corpse can provide information for investigators on some of the circumstances surrounding death.
-
Mourning - Society Islands, Heva ceremony
https://australianmuseum.net.au/about/history/exhibitions/death-the-last-taboo/mourning-society-islands-heva-ceremony/In the Society Islands, French Polynesia, the death of a chief or person of distinction was accompanied by the performance of a ceremony called a heva, which was paid for and organised by the family of the deceased.
-
Mourning - Victorian Era
https://australianmuseum.net.au/about/history/exhibitions/death-the-last-taboo/mourning-victorian-era/In Great Britain, during the reign of Queen Victoria, people usually died in their homes, surrounded by family and friends, and the corpse stayed in the home until burial.
-
Mourning - Indigenous Australia
https://australianmuseum.net.au/about/history/exhibitions/death-the-last-taboo/mourning-indigenous-australia/As a sign of mourning, white 'mourning caps' were worn by some Indigenous Australian communities, although the type of cap worn varied from region to region.
-
Autopsies
https://australianmuseum.net.au/about/history/exhibitions/death-the-last-taboo/autopsies/An autopsy is a detailed and careful medical examination of a person's body and its organs after death to help establish the cause of death.
-
Body disposal - legal procedures
https://australianmuseum.net.au/about/history/exhibitions/death-the-last-taboo/body-disposal-legal-procedures/Certain procedures must be carried out in order to dispose of a human body, including arranging for a funeral, certifying that a person is dead and what the cause of death was, as well as registering the death.