All Stories

  1. Two states of fascicle 1 of Mueller'sFragmenta phytographiae australiae
  2. The difficult provenance of Ferdinand von Mueller's zoological specimens
  3. Natural history “collectors”: exploring the ambiguities
  4. Zoological eponyms honouring the botanist Ferdinand von Mueller
  5. James Rennie (1786–1867) in Australia, 1840–1867
  6. Specimens and the Currency of Honour: the Museum Trade of Ferdinand von Mueller
  7. Biographical notes on George Edgar Dennes
  8. Early copies of the first edition of Origin of species in Australia
  9. Ferdinand von Mueller's interactions with Charles Darwin and his response to Darwinism
  10. Why Explore Antarctica?: Australian Discussions in the 1880s*
  11. Disposing of John Lindley's library and herbarium: the offer to Australia
  12. Mixing private and public: or, did the State pay twice for specimens in Herbarium Hookerianum?
  13. Bringing Science to the Public: Ferdinand von Mueller and Botanical Education in Victorian Victoria
  14. Assistance at a distance: George Bentham, Ferdinand von Mueller and the production of Flora australiensis
  15. Colonial pride and metropolitan expectations: the British Museum and Melbourne's meteorites
  16. Letters, Shipwrecks and Taxonomic Confusion: Establishing a reputation from Australia.
  17. Interacting with a science museum exhibit: vicarious and direct experience and subsequent understanding
  18. Guest editor's introduction to a special issue on 'out-of -school' sources of learning.
  19. Public knowledge of elementary physics
  20. Public knowledge of Biology
  21. Investigating learning from informal sources: Listening to conversations and observing play in science museums
  22. Scientific Literacy and Informal Learning
  23. The Role of Science Education in Educationforthe Environment
  24. Science and Environmental Education: Pious Hopes, Self Praise and Disciplinary Chauvinism