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Australia's museums, herbaria, royal societies & field nats clubs have now uploaded 200,000+ pages to @BioDivLibrary https://t.co/nPDPn47ORs
The Green & Golden Bell Frog was 1st described in 1829 https://t.co/Gf5P9K7hEJ (pic https://t.co/Y37kb4ph4H) via @SILibraries @biodivlibrary
Happy Easter from @bhl_au. Hope the Easter Bilby came! (image from Gould's Mammals of Australia via @BioDivLibrary https://t.co/SeGKrsXIKi)
John Gould described 44% of Australia's bird species, many in this volume: https://t.co/21v4ib0CEQ via @museumsvictoria & @BioDivLibrary
The illustration that accompanied the 1st description of a kangaroo (Shaw 1790) via @museumsvictoria @BioDivLibrary https://t.co/NKk2KqvurE
Peruse Maria Sibylla Merian's "Insects of Surinam" via @biodivlibrary & @SILibraries. https://t.co/CgVr9fINlI #womenshistorymonth
Maria Sibylla Merian's stunning folio-sized "Insects of Europe/Surinam". @museumsvictoria holds the only copy in Australia.
Lumholtz's description of his 1st sighting of the tree-kangaroo named in his honour. https://t.co/mKzcRSQAVv via @BioDivLibrary & @BPLBoston
George Shaw's Ocellated Sphinx via @museumsvictoria & @BioDivLibrary. #ColourOurCollections #ColorOurCollections https://t.co/hL038D8yor
#ColourOurCollections challenge: can you use more colours than the original? https://t.co/NEQSVC7T9J #ColorOurCollections via @BioDivLibrary