
Natural History Museum Blog
51 FOLLOWERS
Welcome to the blog from the Natural History Museum in London, where our curators, researchers, librarians, staff, and volunteers will be bringing you a behind-the-scenes look at what they do and why. The Museum is a world-class visitor attraction and a leading science research center. We use our unique collections and unrivaled expertise to tackle the biggest challenges facing the world..
Natural History Museum Blog
10M ago
The botany curation team, with collaborators and volunteers, has catalogued over 70,000 South Asian botanical specimens. This dataset, published on the Museum’s portal, spans 17th century to present day collections. Digitization has unlocked potential for addressing biodiversity loss, food security, and climate change. Notable collectors and ongoing data enhancement work are also highlighted ..read more
Natural History Museum Blog
1y ago
By Giles Miller
Reflecting on my career at the Natural History Museum made me want to share some of the things I have learned over the years. This blog will take you through my top five tips for anyone embarking on a career as a curator.
When I first arrived at the Museum, curation was a very different career prospect than it is today. In the mid 90s, I was often asked why I wanted to be a curator as I had a PhD ..read more
Natural History Museum Blog
1y ago
How the Museum's herbarium team are digitising and expanding the collection, helping to supporting worldwide scientific collaboration ..read more
Natural History Museum Blog
1y ago
The Museum is employing an innovative algorithm to catalogue environmental DNA data, aiming to accurately capture biodiversity amid growing concerns over climate change and urbanisation. The algorithm simplifies the ‘taxonomic equivalence’ process, underpinning the analysis of a range of wildlife. The method aims to rectify the time-consuming manual mapping of species and is anticipated to enable large-scale monitoring of biodiversity, aiding the development of science-based conservation solutions ..read more
Natural History Museum Blog
1y ago
A guest blog from our Summer placement students Janice Wu and Ying Luo
Janice and Ying at work preparing some mollusc shells for digitisation
The digitisation team started a mass approach to digitising our collections nearly a decade ago. At this time, there were very few museum employees around the country who could claim their job title was “digitiser”. Now, ten years on, the Museum has digitised 5.6 million specimens, the digitisation team has nine full-time digitisers and has been able to host two placement students this summer ..read more
Natural History Museum Blog
1y ago
National Insect Week blog by Louise Berridge
Rev. Alfred Edwin Eaton (1844-1929) – photograph reproduced with permission,
from the collection of the Royal Entomological Society
Most of the Museum’s digitisers have encountered the entomologist Alfred Edwin Eaton (1844-1929) through his specimen labels. We are transcribing the labels of three groups of freshwater insects that Eaton often collected, the Museum’s Ephemeroptera, Trichoptera, and Plectoptera collections. Eaton’s handwriting can be challenging to decipher (see examples below ..read more
Natural History Museum Blog
1y ago
If we want to create advocates for the planet and meet our mission of galvanising a movement of millions around the planet to speak up and act for nature, then we need to be the most inclusive Museum we can be. Our vision is a future where both people and planet thrive – so we must be a museum for all people.
We know we’re racing against time and there’s a lot of work to do ..read more
Natural History Museum Blog
1y ago
This blog is guest-written by Ameyalli Rios Vázquez from Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, a collaborator with the Museum on the Big Seaweed Search Mexico project.
After an amazing two years, the Big Seaweed Search Mexico collaboration is coming to an end. Previous blogs about this project described how the team in Mexico designed and delivered an inspiring programme of activity, for young people from Sisal, Yucatán, and Puerto Morelos, Quintana Roo to collaborate with professional researchers from Mexico and UK in this community science effort to monitor seaweed ..read more
Natural History Museum Blog
2y ago
salajean/Shutterstock
The health of our planet depends on the existence of million species, the ecological networks in which they interact with one another, and the complex habitats they live in and modify. Humans are just one component of this living network and, therefore, we rely on nature for goods and services that underpin our societies, economies, health and wellbeing.
Land use change, intensive farming and hunting of wild animals all increase our exposure to parasites and pathogens ..read more
Natural History Museum Blog
2y ago
In my last blog, the team had just arrived back from our final workshop for the Big Seaweed Search Mexico partnership and I reported on day one. On day two, we headed to the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM) campus just outside Mérida to explore how we could expand our work in the region. This is a big motivation for me personally – that our work could have a positive impact on the lives of local communities, so I was really excited for that ..read more