Some of the smallest organisms might have influenced our own evolutionary path. A new study has found that the distribution ...
Their research suggests that the shearwaters washing up on the beaches were only a tiny fraction of the overall number that ...
Boasting natural daylight and a clean aesthetic, our Garden Kitchen brings the outdoors inside. It’s perfect for evening ...
Hire one of the Museum's most iconic spaces for your private event. The spectacular ceiling and grand staircase make the perfect backdrop to any event.
Your guests can celebrate surrounded by some of the most remarkable objects in our collection including moon rock, precious metals and fluorescent minerals.
New research suggests that the seabirds washing up on Australian beaches in 2023/24 were only a tiny fraction of the overall ...
This exhibition of the world's best nature photography can be booked exclusively for your event or enjoyed during a drinks reception in Fossil Way as part of a larger event in the Hintze Hall. A panel ...
The 19-metre-long Nanaimoteuthis haggarti was a fearsome carnivore eating fish, crustaceans and many other sea creatures.
A new species of coelacanth has been identified from a 150-year-old fossil housed at London’s Natural History Museum. Former University of Portsmouth palaeontology student Jack L. Norton located the ...
There’s no way this wasn’t making the list! While the sea shanty prepared you for your voyage, the Jaws theme tune by John Williams will make you realise… you’re in deep waters now. What song could be ...
A new study suggests that for the last 74,000 years, malaria shaped where early humans could live in Africa—fragmenting populations and influencing patterns of exchange long before recorded history.
Compiled by the Wellcome Sanger Institute and published in Frontier Economics, it is thought that sequencing all species from ...
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