Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://superindex.lbr.auckland.ac.nz/handle/123456789/509436
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dc.creatorBag, Terry-
dc.date2015-
dc.date.accessioned2017-06-30T02:50:42Z-
dc.date.available2017-06-30T02:50:42Z-
dc.identifier.urihttp://superindex.lbr.auckland.ac.nz//handle/123456789/509436-
dc.description3 colour: ink drawings by Robley-
dc.description6 b/w museum interiors and portraits: Hector, Haast, Fuller and Reischek.-
dc.description.abstract"New Zealand's first museums were built upon the abundant stocks of moa bones and stuffed birds available for exchange or sale to overseas institutions in the late 19th century. Collections modeled on a Western European taxonomy formed the foundations of the new museums and helped to establish the credentials of a budding colonial scientific elite - Thomas Cheeseman in Auckland, James Hector in Wellington and German-born Julius von Haast, who founded the Canterbury Museum in Christchurch."-
dc.formatphysical text-
dc.format.mediumText-
dc.format.mediumImage-
dc.languageEnglish-
dc.publisherINZART/The University of Auckland Library=Te Tumu Herenga-
dc.rightsThis material is protected by copyright and has been copied for the educational purposes of the University under licence. You may not sell, alter or further reproduce or distribute any part of this coursepack/material to any other person. Where provided to you in electronic format, you may only print from it for your own private study and research. Failure to comply with the terms of this warning may expose you to legal action for copyright infringement and/or disciplinary action by the University.-
dc.titleBone collectors 2: The plunder of New Zealand's ancestral graves for science*-
prism.number14-
dc.subject.personGrey, George-
dc.subject.personCheeseman, Thomas-
dc.subject.personCraig, Eric-
dc.subject.personMantell, Walter-
dc.subject.personBuller, Walter-
dc.subject.personHector, James-
dc.subject.personHaast, Julius-
dc.subject.personHochstetter, Ferdinand-
dc.subject.personFuller, Frederick-
dc.subject.personMcKay, Alexander-
dc.subject.personReischek, Andreas-
dc.subject.personNgata, Apirana-
dc.subject.personDuff, Roger-
dc.subject.personPomare, Maui-
dc.description.notes*This article is a sequel to "The Bone Collectors: Walter Mantell and the early days of New Zealand zoological discovery" in White Fungus #10.-
dc.identifier.inmagic202293-
dc.subject.articletypeJournal-
dc.subject.artistRobley, Horatio Gordon-
dc.subject.gettymuseums (institutions)-
dc.subject.gettycollections (object groupings)-
dc.subject.gettycollecting-
dc.subject.gettycultural artifacts-
dc.subject.gettycurators-
dc.subject.localMāori culture-
dc.subject.localhistory-
dc.subject.localtheft-
dc.subject.maoritā moko-
dcterms.spatial.venueAuckland War Memorial Museum-
dcterms.spatial.venueDominion Museum (N.Z.)-
dcterms.spatial.venueNational Museum of New Zealand-
dcterms.spatial.venueCanterbury Museum (Christchurch, N.Z.)-
prism.publicationnameWhite fungus-
prism.pagerange7-23-
dc.subject.iwiKāi Tahu-
Appears in Collections:INZART: Inmagic collection (utf8)

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