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Survival Stories: Palm Cockatoo and Regent Honeyeater
https://australian.museum/publications/survival-stories-palm-cockatoo-and-regent-honeyeater/Emily Cave and Zoë Sadokierski sketch the Regent Honeyeater and Palm Cockatoo. Professor Robert Heinsohn and Christina Zdenek conduct fieldwork in Cape York. Experience Emily Cave’s work in the Ornithology collection. Listen to Laurence Pike's musical encounter with Palm Cockatoos.
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Sailfin Tang, Zebrasoma veliferum (Bloch, 1795)
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/fishes/sailfin-tang-zebrasoma-veliferum-bloch-1797/Sailfin Tang, Zebrasoma veliferum (Bloch, 1795)
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Riversleigh Rainforest Koala
https://australian.museum/learn/australia-over-time/extinct-animals/nimiokoala-greystanesi/Nimiokoala greystanesi was a small koala from the early Miocene of northern Australia. It had a longer snout than the living koala but was only about a third of its size. Nimiokoala is represented by a well preserved skull, a significant discovery since koalas are rare in the fossil record.
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Baru darrowi
https://australian.museum/learn/australia-over-time/extinct-animals/baru-darrowi/Baru darrowi, a massive crocodile from the Miocene of northern Australia, was one of the largest of the mekosuchines, an extinct group of Australasian crocodiles. Although about as large as the living Saltwater Crocodile, Baru may have been more terrestrial in its habits.
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Red Little Gurnard Perch, Maxillicosta raoulensis (Eschmeyer and Poss, 1976)
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/fishes/red-little-gurnard-perch-maxillicosta-raoulensis/Red Little Gurnard Perch, Maxillicosta raoulensis (Eschmeyer and Poss, 1976)
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Goblin Shark
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/fishes/goblin-shark-mitsukurina-owstoni/Goblin Shark, Mitsukurina owstoni Jordan, 1898
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Riversleigh Tube-nosed Bandicoot
https://australian.museum/learn/australia-over-time/extinct-animals/yarala-burchfieldi/Yarala burchfieldi is one of the oldest and smallest bandicoots known, as well as the most archaic. It would have foraged in the forest leaf litter for insects and may have been at least partly carnivorous, like the dasyurids.
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Thylacoleo carnifex
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/mammals/thylacoleo-carnifex/Thylacoleo carnifex, the largest carnivorous Australian mammal known, may have hunted other Pleistocene megafauna like the giant Diprotodon. Thylacoleo was one of the first fossil mammals described from Australia, discovered not long after European settlement.
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Ramses & the Gold of the Pharaohs
Special exhibition
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School programs and excursions
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Wansolmoana
Permanent exhibition
Open daily