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Journal articles on the topic 'Swedish Museum of Natural History'

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1

Beckman, Jenny. "Nature's Palace: Constructing the Swedish Museum of Natural History." History of Science 42, no. 1 (2004): 85–111. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/007327530404200103.

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KHAN, RAEES, SHEIKH ZAIN UL ABIDIN, MUSHTAQ AHMAD, and FAHIM ALTINORDU. "Revised typification of the Linnaean name Lobelia zeylanica (Campanulaceae)." Phytotaxa 299, no. 2 (2017): 289. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.299.2.15.

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A previously designated lectotype for the name Lobelia zeylanica is here superseded since the priority of type choice was violated, and a new lectotype is designated using a specimen collected by Osbeck and kept at the Swedish Museum of Natural History (S).
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3

Jansen, J. J. F. J., and S. D. van der Mije. "Review of the mounted skins and skulls of the extinct Falkland Islands wolf, Dusicyon australis, held in museum collections." Archives of Natural History 42, no. 1 (2015): 91–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.2015.0282.

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Only nine skins of the extinct Falkland Islands wolf, Dusicyon australis, are currently known in museum collections. In this article we present the results of locating these specimens with a special focus on the origins of two mounted skins in Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Leiden and in the Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm, Sweden. Although only a few specimens were collected, their history is far more complicated than initially thought, and most of their documentary records are fragmented or lost.
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Abadjiev, Stanislav, and Stoyan Beshkov. "On a small collection of Swedish Lepidoptera, kept at the National Museum of Natural History, Sofia." Historia naturalis bulgarica 31 (November 1, 2018): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.48027/hnb.31.01001.

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The paper presents an inventory of 28 species of butterflies and moths collected in the northernmost part of Sweden during 1931-1932. The collection is of certain historical value and is kept at the National Museum of Natural History at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia.
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Mayama, Shigeki, and Hiromu Kobayasi. "STUDIES ONEUNOTIASPECIES IN THE CLASSICAL “DEGERNÄS MATERIALS” HOUSED IN THE SWEDISH MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY." Diatom Research 5, no. 2 (1990): 351–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0269249x.1990.9705125.

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6

Gültekin, Levent, and Miguel A. Alonso-Zarazaga. "A review of the Palaearctic species of Larinus Dejean (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) in C. J. Schoenherr collection: nomenclature and lectotype designations." Journal of Insect Biodiversity 3, no. 9 (2015): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.12976/jib/2015.3.9.

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The syntypes of 41 species of Larinus Dejean described by L. Gyllenhal and C. H. Boheman, housed at the C. J. Schoenherr collection in the Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm and the Museum of Evolution, Uppsala University, are examined. Lectotypes are designated, a nomenclatural review performed, many previous synonyms confirmed and three new synonyms proposed: Larinus planus (Fabricius, 1792) (= Larinus rusticanus Gyllenhal, 1835 syn. nov.); Larinus carlinae (Olivier, 1807) (= Larinus sulphurifer Boheman, 1843 syn. nov.); Larinus minutus Gyllenhal, 1835 (= Larinus puncticollis Capiomont, 1874 syn. nov.). Colour images for 15 lectotypes are presented.
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7

ROSE, EDWIN D. "Specimens, slips and systems: Daniel Solander and the classification of nature at the world's first public museum, 1753–1768." British Journal for the History of Science 51, no. 2 (2018): 205–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0007087418000249.

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AbstractThe British Museum, based in Montague House, Bloomsbury, opened its doors on 15 January 1759, as the world's first state-owned public museum. The Museum's collection mostly originated from Sir Hans Sloane (1660–1753), whose vast holdings were purchased by Parliament shortly after his death. The largest component of this collection was objects of natural history, including a herbarium made up of 265 bound volumes, many of which were classified according to the late seventeenth-century system of John Ray (1627–1705). The 1750s saw the emergence of Linnaean binomial nomenclature, following the publication of Carl Linnaeus' Species Plantarum (1753) and Systema Naturae (1758). In order to adopt this new system for their collections, the Trustees of the British Museum chose to employ the Swedish naturalist and former student of Linnaeus, Daniel Solander (1733–1782) to reclassify the collection. Solander was ordered to devise a new system for classifying and cataloguing Sloane's natural history collection, which would allow both Linnaeans and those who followed earlier systems to access it. Solander's work was essential for allowing the British Museum to realize its aim of becoming a public centre of learning, adapting the collection to reflect the diversity of classificatory practices which were existent by the 1760s. This task engaged Solander until 1768, when he received an offer from Joseph Banks (1743–1820) to accompany him on HMS Endeavour to the Pacific.
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8

PANSARIN, EMERSON RICARDO, FÁBIO DE BARROS, and ANA KELLY KOCH. "Nomenclatural notes on species of Cleistes (Orchidaceae: Vanilloideae) described by João Barbosa Rodrigues." Phytotaxa 496, no. 2 (2021): 179–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.496.2.7.

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During our taxonomic study of Cleistes, we noticed that some species names published (under the genus name Pogonia) by the Brazilian botanist João Barbosa Rodrigues needed revision. In our search for type specimens, we found the holotypes of Pogonia aphylla and P. paranaensis in the herbarium of the Museu Nacional do Rio de Janeiro (R), and the holotype of P. monantha at the herbarium of the Swedish Museum of Natural History (S). The remaining type specimens housed at RB herbarium have been lost. Consequently, the designation of lectotypes for those species names is needed. Therefore, the original illustrations are here designated as lectotypes of eleven species names. Furthermore, we also propose 14 synonyms for South American Cleistes.
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9

Odsjö, Tjelvar. "The environmental specimen bank, Swedish Museum of Natural History—A base for contaminant monitoring and environmental research." J. Environ. Monit. 8, no. 8 (2006): 791–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/b602676c.

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10

SEIDEL, MATTHIAS, and CHRIS A. M. REID. "Taxonomic changes resulting from a review of the types of Australian Anoplognathini (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Rutelinae) housed in Swedish natural history collections." Zootaxa 4908, no. 2 (2021): 225–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4908.2.4.

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The type material of Australian Anoplognathini (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Rutelinae) housed in Swedish natural history collections is reviewed, concerning three genera: Anoplognathus Leach, 1815, Amblyterus MacLeay, 1819, and Repsimus MacLeay, 1819. The species were described by G.J. Billberg, J.W. Dalman, L. Gyllenhal, C.J. Schönherr, O. Swartz, and C.P. Thunberg. The contemporary type material of W.S. MacLeay in the Macleay Museum, Sydney, is also examined as it has been overlooked by previous researchers. In total, type specimens for 12 species described between 1817 and 1822 were found in the Naturhistoriska Riksmuseet in Stockholm the Evolutionsmuseet in Uppsala and the Macleay Museum. Five of these species are valid: Anoplognathus brunnipennis, (Gyllenhal, 1817); A. olivieri (Schönherr & Dalman, 1817); A. porosus (Dalman, 1817); Amblyterus cicatricosus (Gyllenhal, 1817); and Repsimus manicatus (Swartz, 1817). The other seven species are junior synonyms, as follows (senior synonym first): A. brunnipennis = Rutela chloropyga Thunberg, 1822 (new synonym); A. olivieri = Rutela lacunosa Thunberg, 1822 (new synonym); A. viridiaeneus (Donovan, 1805) = A. latreillei (Schönherr & Gyllenhal, 1817); A. viriditarsus Leach, 1815 = Rutela analis Dalman, 1817; and R. manicatus = Anoplognathus brownii W.J. MacLeay, 1819 = A. dytiscoides W. J. MacLeay, 1819 = Rutela ruficollis Thunberg, 1822 (new synonym). Authorship of A. latreillei and A. olivieri is corrected, as noted above. Anoplognathus brunnipennis has been misidentified for the last 60 years at least, leading to the synonymy noted above. Anoplognathus flavipennis Boisduval, 1835 (revised status), is reinstated as the oldest available name for the misidentified A. brunnipennis and the types of A. flavipennis in the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris, are illustrated. Lectotypes are designated for: Anoplognathus brownii, A. flavipennis, A. dytiscoides, Melolontha cicatricosa, Rutela analis, R. brunnipennis, R. lacunosa, R. latreillei, R. manicata, R. olivieri, R. porosa, R. ruficollis, and R. chloropyga. Photographs of all type specimens examined are presented for the first time.
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11

NORÉN, MICHAEL, and ERIK ÅHLANDER. "The taxonomic status of grass snake, Natrix natrix (Linnaeus, 1758 (Squamata: Colubridae), with designation of a neotype." Zootaxa 4853, no. 1 (2020): 99–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4853.1.5.

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As part of an investigation into the status of the near threatened Gotland grass snake, Natrix natrix gotlandica Nilson & Andrén, 1981, endemic to the island of Gotland, we discovered that Linnaeus’ type series of the common grass snake, Natrix natrix (Linnaeus, 1758), is comprised of specimens from three different currently recognized species. To stabilize the usage of the name Coluber natrix, we investigate Linnaeus’ type series, and a specimen which Linnaeus in 1741 examined west of the Swedish city of Nyköping is designated lectotype. The lectotype has since been lost, and a newly collected specimen from the same locality is designated neotype for Coluber natrix. The neotype is deposited in the herpetology collection of the Swedish Museum of Natural History in Stockholm, Sweden, catalog number NRM 8260.
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12

Merz, Bernhard. "The Lauxaniidae (Diptera) described by C. F. Fallén with description of a misidentified species of Homoneura van der Wulp." Insect Systematics & Evolution 34, no. 3 (2003): 345–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187631203788964782.

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AbstractC. F. Fallén described 15 species of Lauxaniidae, the types of 13 could be studied in the collection of Fallén in the Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm and one type is located in the collection of Zetterstedt in the Zoological Museum Lund. The type of Sapromyza multipunctata was not found. Lectotypes are fixed for 12 species. Homoneura subnotata Papp is a new junior synonym of Homoneura notata (Fallén). Homoneura notata auctt. nec Fallén is now called Homoneura dilecta (Rondani, 1868). Homoneura interstincta (Fallén) has been misidentified in the past. It is fully redescribed and illustrated. Homoneura mediospinosa sp. n. (= H. interstincta auctt. nec Fallén) is described and illustrated. Sapromyza pallida Fallén is unrecognizable, because the only existing syntype, belonging to the Lyciella illota group, cannot be properly identified.
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13

KRECSÁK, LÁSZLÓ. "An account of the generic and specific names, and type specimens of viperid taxa described by Albert Franz Theodor Reuss (Squamata: Viperidae)." Zootaxa 1514, no. 1 (2007): 1–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1514.1.1.

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A complete account of nomina and type specimens of the viperid taxa described by the German herpetologist Theodor Reuss is provided. A list of new genera and subgenera created by Reuss is given. Nomina used in present Viperidae systematics are also mentioned and commented. Synonyms and chresonyms have been found in five genera: Bitis Gray, 1842; Crotalus Linnaeus, 1758; Macrovipera Reuss, 1927; Montatheris Broadley, 1996; Proatheris Broadley, 1996 and Vipera Laurenti, 1768. Forty-four taxa described by Reuss were found, and type(s) have been identified for 21 taxa. I propose the designation of lectotypes for Vipera coronis nigroides Reuss, 1925, Vipera (Pelias) coronis zamenoides Reuss, 1925, Vipera (Mesocoronis) coronis beroides Reuss 1927, Macrovipera lebetina cypriensis Reuss, 1933 and a paralectotype for Vipera coronis nigroides Reuss, 1925. Type material was identified in the Forschungsinstitut und Naturmuseum Senckenberg, Frankfurt (SMF), Museo Regionale di Scienze Naturali, Torino (MZUT), Naturhistorisches Museum Basel (NMB), Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm (NRM), Zoologische Staatssammlung München, Collection Lorenz Müller, München (ZSM (SLM)) and in the Museum für Naturkunde der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin (ZMB), where the main part of the Reuss material has been deposited. Remarks on the usage of Reuss’s names for nomenclatural purposes are made.
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14

Perchiazzi, Natale, Ulf Hålenius, Nicola Demitri, and Pietro Vignola. "Heliophyllite: a discredited mineral species identical to ecdemite." European Journal of Mineralogy 32, no. 2 (2020): 265–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/ejm-32-265-2020.

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Abstract. The type material for heliophyllite, preserved in the Swedish Museum of Natural History in Stockholm, was re-investigated through a combined EPMA (electron probe X-ray microanalysis), Raman, and X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD) and single-crystal study. EPMA chemical data, together with Raman and single-crystal structural studies, point to heliophyllite being identical to ecdemite. XRPD synchrotron data highlight the presence of a minor quantity of finely admixed finnemanite in the analyzed material, explaining the presence of some additional diffraction peaks, not indexable with the ecdemite unit cell, reported in the literature. The discreditation of heliophyllite has been approved by the IMA Commission on New Minerals and Mineral Names (proposal 19-H, 2019).
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15

GÜLTEKİN, LEVENT, and HÉLÈNE PERRIN. "Study of a part of the A. G. Olivier Lixini collection (Coleoptera: Curculionidae): lectotype designations, new synonymies and nomenclatural acts." Zootaxa 2943, no. 1 (2011): 45. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2943.1.2.

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A search for Lixini (Curculionidae: Lixinae) species housed in the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris and the Swedish Natural History Museum, Stockholm allowed the study of a part of the G. -A. Olivier collection. Lectotypes are designated for Larinus centaurii (Olivier, 1807), Larinus cuniculus (Olivier, 1807), Larinus gravidus (Olivier, 1807), Larinus carthami (Olivier, 1807), Lixus cardui Olivier, 1807, Lixus iridis Olivier, 1807, Lixus recurvus Olivier, 1807 and Lixus myagri Olivier, 1807. The following new synonymies and homonymies become evident: Larinus centaurii (Olivier, 1807) [= L. ungulatus Gyllenhal, 1835 syn. nov., L. centaureae Becker, 1864 nom. nud., L. beckeri Petri, 1907 syn. nov.]; Larinus cuniculus (Olivier, 1807) [= L. marki Ter-Minassian, 1982 syn. nov.]; Larinus ursus (Fabricius, 1792) [= L. cuniculus Walker, 1871 hom. nov. nec L. cuniculus (Olivier, 1807) syn. nov.]; Larinus gravidus (Olivier, 1807) [= L. schoenherri Capiomont, 1874 syn. nov.]; Larinus carthami (Olivier, 1807) [= L. crassus Capiomont, 1874 syn. nov., L. griseotessellatus Capiomont, 1874 syn. nov.; L. breviusculus Desbrochers, 1892 syn. nov.]; Lixus recurvus Olivier, 1807 [= L. nordmanni Hochhuth, 1847 syn. nov.]; Lixus myagri Olivier, 1807 [= L. lycophoeus Boheman, 1835 syn. nov. ].
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Rosa, Paolo, and Hege Vårdal. "An annotated catalogue of the types of Chrysididae (Hymenoptera) at the Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm, with brief historical notes." ZooKeys 495 (April 8, 2015): 79–132. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.495.9356.

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17

KOERBER, STEFAN. "From sponges to primates: emendation of 30 species nomina dedicated to the Swedish zoologist Einar Lönnberg." Zootaxa 2201, no. 1 (2009): 63–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2201.1.8.

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In 1891 Axel Johan Einar Lönnberg became a Doctor of Science and a Fellow of Zoology at the University of Uppsala. From 1904 to 1933, he served as head of the Vertebrate Department of the Royal Natural History Museum of Stockholm where after his expeditions around the world he worked the collected material himself. Although he was specialized in ornithology and the fauna of his homecountry Sweden, Lönnberg worked on so many different zoological groups “that since the days of Linnaeus hardly anyone has known so much about so many branches in zoology as Lönnberg” (Anonymous 1943). One of his special interests was to educate his Swedish countrymen about their native animals and he accomplished this during many years as editor and multiple author of the journal Fauna och Flora.
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Svanberg, Ingvar, Patrick Hällzon, and Sabira Ståhlberg. "Glimpses of Loptuq Folk Botany: Phytonyms and Plant Knowledge in Sven Hedin’s Herbarium Notes from the Lower Tarim River Area as a Source for Ethnobiological Research." Studia Orientalia Electronica 7 (May 22, 2019): 96–119. http://dx.doi.org/10.23993/store.76475.

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This interdisciplinary study discusses the vernacular phytonyms and other ethnobiological aspects of vegetation in the Loptuq (Loplik) habitat on the Lower Tarim River. This small Turkic-speaking group lived as fisher-foragers in the Lopnor (Lop Lake) area in East Turkestan, now the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in China. Information about this unique group, and especially the folk knowledge of plants in the area, is scant. In 1900, Swedish explorer Sven Hedin collected plant voucher specimens for the Swedish Natural History Museum in Stockholm. He noted local names on herbarium labels, thus providing modern researchers a rare glimpse into the Loptuq world. As the traditional way of life is already lost and the Loptuq language almost extinct, every trace of the former culture is of significance when trying to understand the peculiarities of human habitats and survival in arid areas. The ethnobiological analysis can further contribute to other fields, such as climate change, and define the place of the Loptuq on the linguistic and cultural map of Central Asia.
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BOSTRÖM, SVEN, and OLEKSANDR HOLOVACHOV. "The Swedish marine nematologist Carl Allgén (1886–1960): a bio-bibliography and his collection." Zootaxa 4232, no. 4 (2017): 451. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4232.4.1.

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The Swedish marine nematologist Carl Allgén (1886–1960) published 185 scientific papers on parasitic, terrestrial, limnic and especially marine nematodes between 1921 and 1960. Among them are also some papers on species of suctorians found mostly on desmodorid nematodes. He described about 70 new genera and over 800 new species and subspecies of nematodes. Allgén left a large collection of nematodes to the Swedish Museum of Natural History in Stockholm and it is now deposited in the invertebrate collection of the Zoology department. The collection comprises about 4500 slides in total, with about 310 slides containing type specimens collected from the Arctic to Antarctica. Allgén’s publications have to a large extent been ignored by scientists working on marine nematodes, likely because of the poor quality of many of his species descriptions. The authors want to remind the scientific community about the existence of Allgén's collection, its availability for study and its importance for nematode taxonomy and systematics. A complete list of Allgén’s publications, a list of all species described by him, and a list of type material available is presented.
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Kotov, Alexey A., and Maria A. Gololobova. "Types of cladoceran species described by Sven Ekman in the Swedish Museum of Natural History, with redescription ofDaphnia cavicervixEkman, 1900 (Daphniidae, Anomopoda, Cladocera)." Journal of Natural History 39, no. 33 (2005): 3059–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930500240015.

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FERRER, JULIO, and KEVIN HOLSTON. "Identities of Tenebrio Linnaeus types at Uppsala, and the resulting changes in old darkling beetle names (Insecta: Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae)." Zootaxa 2308, no. 1 (2009): 29–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2308.1.2.

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In this paper, five names used for darkling beetles (Insecta: Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) in the Linnaeus collection at the Museum of Zoology, Uppsala University (UUMZ) are evaluated based on specimen examinations, modern species concepts, and review of the original species diagnoses. The types are of species described in Systema Naturae (Tenebrio caraboides L., 1758, Tenebrio gibbus L., 1760, Tenebrio gigas L., 1767, and Tenebrio muricatus L., 1758) and Museum Ludovicae Ulrica (Tenebrio spinosus L., 1764). Tenebrio caraboides L., 1758, refers to a composite type series consisting of two UUMZ paralectotypes, identified herein as Pachychila hispanica Solier, 1835, and gaditana Rosenhauer, 1856, and the lectotype in the Linnean Collection, Natural History Museum, London (BMNH), for the ground beetle Cychrus caraboides (L. 1758). The three specimens in the De Geer Collection, Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm (NHRS), under Tenebrio gibbus L., 1760, are determined as Psammodes gibbus (L., 1760), comb. nov.; this includes the “lost” type of Linnaeus, whereas the UUMZ Linnaeus specimen is not a type and identified as an undetermined species of Amnodeis Miller, 1858, similar to A. giganteus Reiche & Saulcy, 1857. The type of Tenebrio spinosus L., 1764, represents an Egyptian species, Akis spinosus (L., 1764), which has often been misidentified as Akis trilineata Herbst, 1799, a West Mediterranean species. The holotype of Tenebrio muricatus L., 1758, is Adesmia muricatus (L., 1758), comb. nov., a species appearing in recent publications as Adesmia austera Baudi di Selve, 1881, syn. nov. Two Linnean specimens preserved with the UUMZ types under the unpublished names “Tenebrio impressus” and “Tenebrio variolosus” are an undetermined species of Erodius Fabr., 1775, and Pimelia fornicata Herbst, 1799, respectively. Psammodes gibbus (L., 1760), comb. nov., is the valid name for Psammodes striatus (Fabr., 1775), syn. nov., a South African species. Pimelia gibba Fabr., 1787, and Tenebrio gibbus Pallas, 1781, are synonyms, making the current combination and attribution for this species name Moluris gibbus (Pallas, 1781). Pimelia simplex Solier, 1836, is restored as valid, resulting in changes for three subspecies names: Pimelia simplex simplex Solier, 1836, stat. rest., Pimelia simplex oasis Koch, 1941, comb. nov., and Pimelia simplex substriata Koch, 1941, comb. nov. Two new synonyms are recognized for Centorus elongatus (Herbst 1797): Calcar variabilis Gebien, 1906, syn. nov. (an unavailable subsequent usage of Tenebrio variolosus Fabr., 1801), and Tenebrio variolosus Fabr., 1801, syn. nov.
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Konsa, Kurmo. "Kust pärinevad metaandmed: infoteoreetiline vaade." Ajalooline Ajakiri. The Estonian Historical Journal 172, no. 2 (2020): 141–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.12697/aa.2020.2.03.

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According to the simplest and most common definition, metadata refers to a set of data that describes other data. Research on metadata is focused almost exclusively on solving practical issues. There are few theories on metadata that emphasise the lack of a common theoretical foundation to handle metadata, and there is also a lack of corresponding research. This article looks at metadata from a broad perspective of information technology and seeks an answer to a question that may, at first glance, seem simple: what is the origin of metadata? The article aims to present a conceptual model that connects metadata to communication processes, thereby creating an opportunity to treat metadata in a more systematic manner.
 In memory institutions, different metadata schemes and standards are used to describe digital objects. In order to describe objects, libraries use bibliographical entries that correspond to valid entry and cataloguing rules. Objects are described by bibliographic entries and catalogued in a bibliographic format. Nowadays, cataloguing rules are mostly based on the ISBD (International Standard Bibliographic Description). The most common bibliographic formats are standards belonging to the MARC (Machine Readable Cataloguing) group. Some libraries, such as the Academic Library of Tallinn University and the University of Tartu Library use the Dublin Core metadata standard to describe the digital objects they preserve. A particular feature of the metadata systems used by libraries is that all objects in a collection are described to at least a minimum level. Archives in Estonia use the General International Standard Archival Description (ISAD(G)), which was developed by the International Council on Archives. Archives differ from libraries in that archives usually describe objects in detail on the levels of archive, series, and archive item, and preservation of the full context of information is prioritised. Estonian museums began introducing common structured metadata in 1992, when the Ministry of Culture commissioned a software company called AS GenNet Laboratories to develop KVIS (Information System of Cultural Values). The development of KVIS was based on the CIDOC (International Committee for Documentation) data model of the International Council of Museums, and on SWETERM, the Swedish standard of forming name attributes. This was an object-oriented data model, and the description was focused not on the object but the event. This type of description model is also supported by the CRM (Conceptual Reference Model) adopted by CIDOC in 2006. In 2005, the Ministry of Culture decided to create MuIS, a new information system for museums, although this new system was based on the same underlying data model as the previous system. The descriptions of museum objects are supported by central glossaries that ensure museum items are described as required and that searches can be made across museums. To describe natural scientific collections, other information systems are also used, such as the SARV database, used for managing data related to geocollections. Archaeological collections have their own databases as well, with specific metadata. The digital collection of the Art Museum of Estonia uses a bespoke system of metadata.
 Metadata are connected to each of the elements in the communication process: metadata are the attributes describing these elements. Each element of a communication act is characterised by specific, fixed attributes that provide full information about the act. All the attributes of the set of elements pertaining to a specific communication act make up the full meta description of this communication act. In fact, a communication act can be characterised by various attributes. The selection of metadata attributes used to characterise a communication process is connected to the function of the metadata relevant for the particular case.
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BAHIA, JULIANA, and MICHAEL SCHRÖDL. "Brazilian Polycladida (Rhabditophora: Platyhelminthes): Rediscovery of Marcus’ type material and general revision." Zootaxa 4490, no. 1 (2018): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4490.1.1.

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Polyclads are a conspicuous group of marine invertebrates, the most charismatic members of the phylum Platyhelminthes. From Brazil, a total of 71 polyclad species were reported or described. Only three of them were recently described, five are recent records for the Brazilian coast, and 55 were described by Ernest and Eveline Marcus, who were by far the most productive workers. However, they quite often published in Portuguese or German, rather than English, and have not designated type material or specified material deposited in museum collections. Most of the polylcad material studied by the Marcus was found to be in the Swedish Museum of Natural History. Here we summarize the knowledge about Brazilian polyclad biodiversity, give information about deposited material in different museums for future reference, and designate type material for the species that did not have any. We examined 58 polyclad species reported from Brazil and designated type material and information available on type series of 52 species. Lectotypes (89 vouchers) were designated for 30 species and paralectotypes (73 specimens / 70 vouchers) were designated for 22 Brazilian species. Among the 261 type vouchers examined in this work, 22 species (77 vouchers) had material recognized as holotypes and 2 vouchers were recognized as paratypes. Of the total number of species reported from Brazil, 10 species remain without information about type material. In the present paper we also propose a new combination (Lurymare cynarium nov. comb.). Eleven species have their geographical distribution range broadened and 42 were photographed for the first time, five of those were photographed live as well. The number of Brazilian polyclad species is expected to rise when different regions and environments are surveyed.
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24

Fransson, Thord, Lina Jansson, Tuomo Kolehmainen, and Thomas Wenninger. "Collision with power lines and electrocutions in birds — an analysis based on Swedish ringing recoveries 1990–2017." Ornis Svecica 29 (July 10, 2019): 37–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.34080/os.v29.19731.

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Recoveries of birds ringed in Sweden from the period 1990–2017 were used to analyse the occurrence of collisions with power lines and electrocutions. Out of more than 10,000 recoveries of birds found dead with finding circumstances mentioned, 8.6% was associated with power line constructions. The number of species involved was 51 and high proportions were especially evident in some species of owls and raptors. The overall proportion of recoveries caused by collision / electrocution shows a significant decrease over time. A decrease over time in the proportions of electrocution and collision was also evident when analysing finding circumstances in four species where corpses were sent to the Swedish Museum of Natural History. Information about the power line system in Sweden during the period 2007–2016 shows that the length of local power lines has decreased with about 21% during a ten-year period and that underground cables have increased with 28% during the same period. The results show that collisions with power lines have decreased more than electrocutions and this may imply that there are still many places where birds are at risk of being electrocuted.
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25

Pring, Allan. "HOLTSTAM, D. & LANGHOF, J. (eds) 1999. Långban: The Mines, Their Minerals, Geology and Explorers. 217 pp. Stockholm: Raster Förlag & Swedish Museum of Natural History. Price 450 Swedish Kroner. ISBN 91 87214 881." Geological Magazine 136, no. 5 (1999): 599–606. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0016756899313029.

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26

KIAŁKA, AGATA, and RAFAŁ RUTA. "An illustrated catalogue of the New Zealand marsh beetles (Coleoptera: Scirtidae)." Zootaxa 4366, no. 1 (2017): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4366.1.1.

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In this study we summarise the knowledge of the history and current state of research on the New Zealand Scirtidae to provide a base for further research on the family. Data on Tord Nyholm’s research and collections are presented, based on a study of the archives and collection of Swedish Museum of Natural History. The main part of the paper is a catalogue of all described species of Scirtidae known to occur in New Zealand. A total of 11 genera and 126 species of Scirtidae is recorded for New Zealand, with 82% genera and 100% of species endemic to the New Zealand region. A reference to the original description, type locality, type depository and the known distribution within New Zealand is included for each species. Primary type specimens are illustrated for most species. Type species are designated in the present paper for Cyphanus Sharp, 1878 (type species: Cyphanus debilis Sharp, 1878), Mesocyphon Sharp, 1878 (type species: Mesocyphon marmoratus Sharp, 1878), and Veronatus Sharp, 1878 (type species: Anobium tricostellum White, 1846) as they were not fixed in the original descriptions or in subsequent works. Brounicyphon Pic, 1947 is considered a junior subjective synonym of Veronatus. Cyphon huttoni Sharp, 1878 is transferred to the genus Contacyphon Gozis, 1886.
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27

Englund, Markus, Mikko Heikkinen, and Lisa Sundström. "Involving Collection Staff in the DINA Software Development – An Agile Approach." Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 2 (May 18, 2018): e25580. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/biss.2.25580.

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In order to ensure long-term commitment to the DINA project (“DIgital information system for NAtural history data”, https://dina-project.net), it is essential to continuously deliver features of high value to the user community. This is also what agile software development methods try to achieve by emphasizing early delivery, rapid response to changes and close collaboration with users (see for example the Manifesto for Agile Software Development at http://agilemanifesto.org). We will give a brief overview on how current development of the DINA collection management system core is guided by agile principles. The mammal collection at the Swedish Museum of Natural History will be used as an example. Developing a cross-disciplinary collection management system is a complex task that poses many challenges: Which features should we focus on? What kinds of data should the system ultimately support? How can the system be flexible but still easy to use? Since we cannot do everything at once, we work towards a minimum viable product (MVP) that contains just enough features at a time to bring value for selected target users. In the mammal collection case, the MVP is the simplest product that is able to replace the functions of the current system used for managing the collection. As we begin to work with other collections, new MVPs are defined and used to guide further development. Thus, the set of features available will increase with each MVP, benefiting both new and current users. Another big challenge is migration of legacy data, which is labor intensive and involves standardizing data that are not compatible with the new system. To address these issues, we aim to build a flexible data model that allows less structured data to coexist with more complex, highly structured data. Migration should thus not require extensive data standardization, transformation and cleaning. The plan is to instead offer tools for transforming and cleaning the data after they have been imported. With the data in place, it will be easier for the user to provide feedback and suggest new features.
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28

Caroli, Sergio. "Antarctic environmental banking: the quest for a global approach." Antarctic Science 8, no. 3 (1996): 227. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0954102096000314.

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Recent estimates report that more than eight million substances are known and that about 70 000 of them are widely exploited as pesticides, food additives, pharmaceuticals and industrial compounds with a total production of several million tons per year. The global circulation of polluting chemicals is well known to have reached even the Antarctic continent. This has resulted in an enhancement both of the baseline levels of naturally occurring organic and inorganic substances and an increasing presence of man-made compounds that simply should not be there. Localized anthropogenic activities are also contributing to the overall low yet progressive deterioration of the pristine Antarctic conditions. Local pollution may well be alleviated by a full implementation of the Madrid Protocol, but the crucial phenomena of worldwide chemical contamination will continue. To maximize the value of Antarctica as a source of global baseline data cooperative and harmonized approaches need to be adopted at the international level to monitor chemical pollution, thus avoiding useless duplication of effort and maximizing the comparability of data. From this standpoint the importance of the establishment of Antarctic environmental specimen banks cannot be exaggerated. The rationale behind such undertakings is certainly not new: specimen banks have been in operation for twenty years e.g. at the former National Bureau of Standards (now National Institute of Standards and Technology) in the USA, at the Swedish Museum of Natural History and at the Jülich Research Center in Germany.
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29

Bäcklin, B. M., L. Eriksson, and M. Olovsson. "Histology of Uterine Leiomyoma and Occurrence in Relation to Reproductive Activity in the Baltic Gray Seal (Halichoerus grypus)." Veterinary Pathology 40, no. 2 (2003): 175–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1354/vp.40-2-175.

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A high prevalence of uterine leiomyoma has been reported in Baltic gray seals aged 15 years and above. Studies on Baltic seals during the 1970s revealed high tissue concentrations of the organochlorines bis(chlorophenyl)-1,1,1-trichloroethane (DDT) and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), lowered reproduction rate, and pathologic changes. In the second half of the 1970s, decreases of PCB and DDT in Baltic biota occurred, and the prevalence of pregnancies in Baltic seals increased. Between 1975 and 1997, 53 Baltic gray seal females of age 15–40 years were found dead and sent to the Swedish Museum of Natural History. Seals were autopsied and 34/53 (64%) had uterine leiomyomas. Samples from 15 were sufficiently well preserved for histologic examination. Uterine leiomyomas were found most commonly in the uterine corpus but also were observed in the uterine horns, cervix, and vagina. Cut surfaces of the leiomyomas appeared as whorled white fibrous tissue. Histologically, spindle cells were arranged in a whorl-like pattern. The nuclei were rod-like and strikingly uniform in shape and size. Mitotic figures were rare. Immunohistochemical staining of the tumors showed a positive reaction to antibodies recognizing smooth muscle actin. Reproductively active gray seals have an ovarian corpus luteum or albicans for most of the year. In 22/34 (65%) gray seals with uterine leiomyomas, ovaries did not contain corpora. In gray seals without macroscopically detected uterine leiomyoma, ovaries from 6/19 (32%) seals had no corpora. It is possible that the development of leiomyoma in the seals is associated with organochlorines and the previous low reproductive activity.
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30

Christy, A. G. "D. Holtstam and J. Langhof, (Eds). Långban: The Mines, their Minerals, Geology and Explorers. Raster Förlag, Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm, 1999. 215 pp Skr 450 (400 for direct purchase), approx. £34 ISBN 91-87214-881." Mineralogical Magazine 63, no. 4 (1999): 609–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1180/minmag.1999.063.4.16.

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31

Shorenko, K. I., Yu A. Podunai, O. I. Davidovich, and M. S. Kulikovskyi. "Morphological variation of two marine diatom species, Nitzschia ventricosa and Ardissonea crystallina (Bacillariophyta)." Marine Biological Journal 1, no. 4 (2016): 53–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.21072/mbj.2016.01.4.07.

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The relevance of the article is caused by insufficient knowledge of the problem of understanding of the diatoms species scope, particularly in vitro. The aim of the research is to study the morphological variability in cultures of two species of marine pennate diatoms, Nitzschia ventricosa and Ardissonea crystallina using methods of light and scanning electron microscopy. In addition we assessed the impact of salinity on morphological parameters of A. crystallina valves in the experiment, which is used in the diagnosis of the type. The material for investigation were isolates (algological pure cultures and clones) obtained in vitro. N. ventricosa isolates were received from natural populations collected at coasts of Canary Islands, Islands of Martinique and Texas (Gulf of Mexico). The clones of A. crystallina were allocated from benthic samples in Kazachya Bay (Sevastopol, the Black Sea). The culture was established with the micropipette way and grown in Petri dishes on ESAW media with natural light at a temperature of 20 °C. We refer to a clone (strain) as vegetative offspring derived from a single cell, while the algological pure culture is a group of clones of the same species. The algological pure culture of A. crystallina (consisting of several strains) was physically separated and grown in parallel with six levels of salinity (8, 12, 17, 30, 38 and 48 ‰) for two months. To obtain the required initial salinity the medium salinity (36 ‰) was diluted with the necessary amount of distilled water, or NaCl was added. The terms of keeping of cultures in artificial conditions until the preparation of drugs were no more than 2 months longer, in order to avoid teratological changes. The species Nitzschia ventricosa was originally discovered on the coast of Hong Kong and described in 1873 by the British naturalist F. Kitton. In the Black and Azov seas' benthos and plankton the species N. ventricosa was not observed. While studying the collected materials of the British Natural History Museum (London), the holotype of N. ventricosa was not marked by F. Kitton. The slide № 10365 from the collections of the British Museum (Collection Deby), with this type of material from Hong Kong, was studied. The material in the slide was decided to be authentic (specimina authentica). The material showed the proximity of morphometric characteristics of the valves. Data was compared to the ones given from other Pacific populations. The species Ardissonea crystallina (C. Agardh) Grunow was described by Swedish botanist C. Agardh in 1824 as Diatoma crystallinum C. Agardh. The type locality (locus typicus) are the waters of Sinus Codani, which corresponds to Kattegat Strait, located between the East coast of the Jutland peninsula and the south-western part of the Scandinavian Peninsula. Both species are widely distributed in the oceans and are found regularly in the benthos and plankton, however, they have not been studied in cultures. The following conclusions were obtained: 1. Morphological variability in cultures of N. ventricosa and A. crystallina was comparable with those obtained on the material from natural populations. 2. We managed to get both types of auxospore in the cultures that allowed us to estimate the upper limit of the size range of both types of cells. For N. ventricosa it was 616.0 µm, for A. crystallina the maximum length was 678.0 µm. 3. The variation of number of striae and fibulae in one clone of N. ventricosa was higher than in pure cultures. 4. It has been shown that A. crystallina was able to live while salinity was from 8 to 48 ‰. 5. The A. crystallina culture derived from natural population of the Black Sea, was close to the number of striae to the population from the coast of Canada (Shalёr Bay). 6. The content of the cultures at different rates of salinity for two months has not led to significant morphological changes of A. crystallina cells. There was no effect of salinity on qualitative morphological features of A. crystallina. With an increase of salinity in the experiment arrangement density of striae and areolae of A. crystallina tend to increase, and the width of the cell — to decrease. With the increase of salinity, an increase of the breadth ranges of the striae number variation was observed.
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32

Garcia-Guinea, J. "Spanish Natural History Museum." Science 283, no. 5400 (1999): 327e—327. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.283.5400.327e.

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33

NOVACEK, MICHAEL. "Natural History Museum (cont'd)." Nature 345, no. 6277 (1990): 656. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/345656a0.

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34

TASSY, P. "Natural History Museum (cont'd)." Nature 345, no. 6277 (1990): 656. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/345656b0.

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35

URBANEK, ADAM. "Natural History Museum (cont'd)." Nature 345, no. 6277 (1990): 656. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/345656c0.

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36

Crawford, Ryan. "Proust’s Natural History Museum." Qui Parle 28, no. 1 (2019): 103–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10418385-7522587.

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37

MATSUURA, Keiichi. "Natural History Collections and National Museum of Natural History." TRENDS IN THE SCIENCES 20, no. 5 (2015): 5_46–5_51. http://dx.doi.org/10.5363/tits.20.5_46.

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38

GREGORY, J. T. "Museum Life: The National Museum of Natural History." Science 232, no. 4753 (1986): 1030–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.232.4753.1030-a.

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39

YAMADA, Tadasu. "From a Natural History Museum." TRENDS IN THE SCIENCES 15, no. 3 (2010): 62–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.5363/tits.15.3_62.

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40

Kim, Jong-Heon. "‘World Museum of Natural History’." Journal of the Korean earth science society 36, no. 1 (2015): 136–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.5467/jkess.2015.36.1.136.

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41

HUMPHREY, PHILIP S. "University Natural History Museum Systems." Curator: The Museum Journal 35, no. 1 (1992): 49–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.2151-6952.1992.tb00734.x.

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42

Gee, Henry. "American Museum of Natural History." Nature 369, no. 6476 (1994): 87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/369087b0.

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43

Karlsson, Andreas, Dan Holtstam, Luca Bindi, Paola Bonazzi, and Matthias Konrad-Schmolke. "Adding complexity to the garnet supergroup: monteneveite, Ca<sub>3</sub>Sb<sup>5+</sup><sub>2</sub>(Fe<sup>3+</sup><sub>2</sub>Fe<sup>2+</sup>)O<sub>12</sub>, a new mineral from the Monteneve mine, Bolzano Province, Italy." European Journal of Mineralogy 32, no. 1 (2020): 77–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/ejm-32-77-2020.

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Abstract. Monteneveite, ideally Ca3Sb25+(Fe23+Fe2+)O12, is a new member of the garnet supergroup (IMA 2018-060). The mineral was discovered in a small specimen belonging to the Swedish Museum of Natural History coming from the now abandoned Monteneve Pb–Zn mine in Passiria Valley, Bolzano Province, Alto Adige (South Tyrol), Italy. The specimen consists of mainly magnetite, sphalerite, tetrahedrite-(Fe) and oxycalcioroméite. Monteneveite occurs as black, subhedral crystals with adamantine lustre. They are equidimensional and up to 400 µm in size, with a subconchoidal fracture. Monteneveite is opaque, grey in reflected light, and isotropic under crossed polars. Measured reflectance values (%) at the four COM wavelengths are 12.6 (470 nm), 12.0 (546 nm), 11.6 (589 nm) and 11.4 (650 nm). The Vickers hardness (VHN100) is 1141 kg mm−2, corresponding to H=6.5–7, and the calculated density is 4.72(1) g cm−3. A mean of 10 electron microprobe analyses gave (wt %) CaO 23.67, FeO 3.75, Fe2O3 29.54, Sb2O5 39.81, SnO2 2.22, ZnO 2.29, MgO 0.15, MnO 0.03 and CoO 0.03. The crystal chemical formula calculated on the basis of a total of eight cations and 12 anions, and taking into account the available structural and spectroscopic data, is (Ca2.97Mg0.03)Σ=3.00 (Sb1.735+Sn0.104+Fe0.173+)Σ=2.00(Fe2.433+Fe0.372+Zn0.20)Σ=3.00O12. The most significant chemical variations encountered in the sample are related to a substitution of the type YSn4++ZFe3+→YSb5++ZFe2+. Mössbauer data obtained at RT and 77 K indicate the presence of tetrahedrally coordinated Fe2+. Raman spectroscopy demonstrates that there is no measurable hydrogarnet component in monteneveite. The six strongest Bragg peaks in the powder X-ray diffraction pattern are [d (Å), I (%), (hkl)]: 4.45, 100, (220); 3.147, 60, (400); 2.814, 40, (420); 2.571, 80, (422); 1.993, 40, (620); 1.683, 60, (642). Monteneveite is cubic, space group Ia-3‾d, with a=12.6093(2) Å, V=2004.8(1) Å3, and Z=8. The crystal structure was refined up to R1=0.0197 for 305 reflections with Fo&gt;4σ(Fo) and 19 parameters. Monteneveite is related to the other Ca-, Sb- and Fe-bearing, nominally Si-free members of the bitikleite group, but it differs in that it is the only known garnet species with mixed trivalent and divalent cations (2:1) at the tetrahedral Z site. Textural and mineralogical evidence suggests that monteneveite formed during peak metamorphism (at ca. 600 ∘C) during partial breakdown of tetrahedrite-(Fe) by reactions with carbonate, under relatively oxidizing conditions. The mineral is named after the type locality, the Monteneve (Schneeberg) mine.
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44

Root, Nina J. "American Museum of Natural History Library." Science & Technology Libraries 6, no. 1-2 (1985): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j122v06n01_01.

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45

Williams, Benjamin W., and W. Peyton Fawcett. "Field Museum of Natural History Library." Science & Technology Libraries 6, no. 1-2 (1985): 27–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j122v06n01_04.

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46

Giles Miller, C., and Miranda Lowe. "The Natural History Museum Blaschka collections." Historical Biology 20, no. 1 (2008): 51–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08912960701677531.

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47

Butler, Declan. "France to renovate natural history museum." Nature 401, no. 6749 (1999): 104. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/43519.

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48

Gmelch, George. "Baseball in the Natural History Museum." NINE: A Journal of Baseball History and Culture 11, no. 2 (2003): 135–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/nin.2003.0008.

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49

Fortey, Richard. "Natural history: Backstage at the museum." Nature 543, no. 7647 (2017): 618–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/543618a.

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50

Hadlington, Simon. "Natural History Museum in a decline?" Nature 333, no. 6171 (1988): 289. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/333289d0.

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