A flea, a claw and a dinosaur: natural history treasures come to Melbourne

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From the world’s biggest butterfly to the mockingbirds that changed history - the exhibition has defied the difficulties of COVID-19. MelbourneMuseum NaturalHistoryMuseum

From the world’s biggest butterfly to a 200 million-year-old dinosaur and the fleas accused of spreading a plague – there’s no shortage of stories to tell about the natural world.Treasures of the Natural WorldLondon’s Natural History Museum has loaned more than 200 objects, including some of the world’s oldest, rarest and biggest, for the exhibition that has defied the complexities of COVID-19.

“It’s also a really powerful story about how First Peoples are leading the conservation of the species,” Carland said. “There are 22,000 people made up of 152 clans, living on 360 hectares – they all have to work together to protect the habitat because they all love and adore this butterfly.” The original plague flea specimen that Charles Rothschild described in 1903 in Egypt as the main plague vector, responsible for the spread of bubonic plague, will also have a moment in the spotlight.

“[There’ve been] a few little heartbreaks along the way, a few lost words, objects get moved, possibly a specimen or two that may not join us, but exhibitions always become stronger when tested – it’s in the fine tuning that we make things sing.”

 

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