Showing 1 - 6 results of 6 for search '"Museum of London"', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
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    Sydney Carton’s Other Doubles by Joel J. Brattin

    Published 2012-01-01
    “…Utilizing close examination of the revisions in Dickens’s remarkable manuscript of the novel (now in the Forster Collection at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London), I consider several other figures that double Carton: Mr. …”
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    La collection Campana au musée Napoléon III et la question de l’appropriation des modèles pour les musées d’art industriel by Isaline Deléderray-Oguey

    Published 2017-10-01
    “…But there was no consensus on the location of the collection in the French and Parisian museum landscape being elaborated: should the Musée Napoléon III be made an autonomous institution and should it be given missions similar to the South Kensington Museum in London? Or should it be made part of the Louvre, and thus add to its collections of masterpieces? …”
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    Tarsal metric trends over the Medieval-Post-Medieval transition in London by Malorie E. Albee

    Published 2022-03-01
    “…T-tests and ANCOVAs (and their non-parametric equivalents) were used to compare calcaneal and talar lengths of 1086 adults from 14 London cemeteries (Medieval n = 8, Post-Medieval n = 6), available in the Oracle Wellcome Osteological Research Database (WORD) curated by the Museum of London. Males and females were also analyzed separately. …”
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    From museum drawer to tree: Historical DNA phylogenomics clarifies the systematics of rare dung beetles (Coleoptera: Scarabaeinae) from museum collections. by Fernando Lopes, Nicole Gunter, Conrad P D T Gillett, Giulio Montanaro, Michele Rossini, Federica Losacco, Gimo M Daniel, Nicolas Straube, Sergei Tarasov

    Published 2024-01-01
    “…We successfully tested our approach by sequencing DNA from scarab dung beetles preserved in both wet and dry collections, including unique primary type and rare historical specimens from internationally important natural history museums in London, Paris and Helsinki. The focal specimens comprised of enigmatic dung beetle genera (Nesosisyphus, Onychothecus and Helictopleurus) and varied in age and preservation. …”
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