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Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Cutting, ? The Age, Tourist Draw, ? 6 January 1951
Numbers of visitors increased. New animals introduced to the Sanctuary.Originalnon-fictionNumbers of visitors increased. New animals introduced to the Sanctuary.1950s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Cutting, The Sun News-Pictorial, Melbourne, Sanctuary's New Chief, 18 September 1959
Princess Alexandra with animals and keeper Leslie WyattPhotocopynon-fictionPrincess Alexandra with animals and keeper Leslie Wyatt1950s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Cutting, Mollison, Joe, Progress at Sanctuary, 23 July1959
New buildings in Sanctuary and description of facilities for the animals.photocopynon-fictionNew buildings in Sanctuary and description of facilities for the animals.1950s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper, The Age, Melbourne, 18 September 1959
2 photos of Princess Alexandra with animals and keeper Leslie Wyattphotocopynon-fiction2 photos of Princess Alexandra with animals and keeper Leslie Wyatt1950s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, Article, Eadie, Robert R et al, The creation of a Sanctuary, 5 February 1944
Article published over four weeks, January 22, January 29, February 5, February 12, 1944. Amongst subjects mentioned, start of charging for admission, setting up of Committee to choose land, flood damage, collecting animals, first captive platypus at Sanctuary and official opening of Sanctuary.photocopy two pages..Article published over four weeks, January 22, January 29, February 5, February 12, 1944. Amongst subjects mentioned, start of charging for admission, setting up of Committee to choose land, flood damage, collecting animals, first captive platypus at Sanctuary and official opening of Sanctuary.1940s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, Report, The Herald Melbourne, Sanctuary needs more land, 8 October 1945
Present area of the Sanctuary is only 78 acres. Requires more land not only to breed our familiar animals but those which are threatened with extinction.photocopyPresent area of the Sanctuary is only 78 acres. Requires more land not only to breed our familiar animals but those which are threatened with extinction. 1940s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, Letter, Hodge, Pauline J, Sanctuary Cruel?, 7 February 1948
Letter from a visitor criticising conditions for some animals and birds.photocopyLetter from a visitor criticising conditions for some animals and birds. 1940s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, Report, The Age, Melbourne, Sanctuary in Need of Funds, 23 September 1948
Mr McDonald (Acting Premier) to recommend to Cabinet a grant to the Sanctuary to meet costs of fencing and transport of birds and animals.photocopyMr McDonald (Acting Premier) to recommend to Cabinet a grant to the Sanctuary to meet costs of fencing and transport of birds and animals.1940s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper, Mobil Road Guide, Mobil Road Guide to the Sir Colin MacKenzie Sanctuary Healesville, 1950
Map and description of some animals in Sanctuary.Photocopynon-fictionMap and description of some animals in Sanctuary.1950s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Cutting, The Age, Melbourne, Fauna and Flora, 4 August 1950
States how the Sanctuary has flourished under Mr Pinches with constant additions of animals and birdsPhotocopynon-fictionStates how the Sanctuary has flourished under Mr Pinches with constant additions of animals and birds1950s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Cutting, The Herald, Melbourne, Sanctuary Optimists Set Up House, 28 July 1950
Description of animals and birds preparing for Spring.Photocopynon-fictionDescription of animals and birds preparing for Spring.1950s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Cutting, Wheatman, James B, Sanctuary Not a Playground, 1 November 1958
Comparison of behaviour of animals and humans at SanctuaryPhotocopynon-fictionComparison of behaviour of animals and humans at Sanctuary1950s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper, RoyalAuto, Victoria, February 1957
6 photos of couple with various animals and Dir. Gaskinoriginalnon-fiction6 photos of couple with various animals and Dir. Gaskin1950s -
Broadmeadows Historical Society & Museum
Document - Poundkeeper's Book
Book used to record entries by the Shire of Merriang/Shire of Broadmeadows Poundkeeper between 1865-1954.This book records details of animals impounded by the Pound at Beveridge and their fate.The book is cloth hardcovered with a leather spine, colour brown with red insert on spine.Spine: Poundkeeper's Bookpoundkeeper, shire of merriang, shire of broadmeadows, 1865, 1954, beveridgethis -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, Report, The Sun News-Pictorial, Melbourne, Rattlesnakes, Skunks for Santuary. Healesville Curator Returning, 11 July 1947
Report from San Francisco re Mr David Fleay returning to Sanctuary with a variety of animals and birds.photocopyReport from San Francisco re Mr David Fleay returning to Sanctuary with a variety of animals and birds.1940s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, Report, The Argus, Melbourne, Sanctuary at Healesville to get Rattlesnakes, 11 July 1947
Mr David Fleay returns from America with variety of animals and birds.photocopyMr David Fleay returns from America with variety of animals and birds.1940s -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Newspaper, The Young Herald, Big Openings in Farm Science, 1958
careers in agriculture, students, dookie, agronomy, plant sciences, animal husbandry, longerenong -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Cutting, Eastern, J, Depressed by Sanctuary, 15 April 1955
Plight of animals in enclosures.Photocopynon-fictionPlight of animals in enclosures. 1950s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Cutting, The Sun News-Pictorial, Melbourne, Vandals: Death, Damage at Zoo, 14 January 1955
Description of some of the behaviour and subsequent damage done at the Sanctuary to both animals and property.Photocopynon-fictionDescription of some of the behaviour and subsequent damage done at the Sanctuary to both animals and property.1950s -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Photograph - BASIL MILLER COLLECTION: POSTCARD AUSTRALIAN ANIMALS
Postcard include photo of many kangaroos. Produced by Biscay Greetings Pty Ltd, Telephone (03) 544 5144.On the back: Hi, we are having a great time. Visited Lansell Plaza shopping centre (it used to be Marong Village). You should see it now, lots on new shops - 56 in all. We had trouble picking where to have lunch, there's so many places to choose from. see you soon Len and Elaine.basil miller, australian animals, kangaroos, post card -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Photograph - BASIL MILLER COLLECTION: POSTCARD KOOKABURRA
Postcard of Kookaburra. Produced by National View, printed by Murfett Publishers Australia.basil miller, australian animals, kookaburra -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Photograph - BASIL MILLER COLLECTION: PHOTOGRAPH FEMALE KANGAROO AND JOEY IN POUCH
Postcard of female grey kangaroo and joey in pouch. Made in Western Germany in perfect colour for John Englander and Co Pty Ltd Melbourne.basil miller, australian animals, kangaroo -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Animal specimen - Whale Rib Bone, Undetermined
Prior to carrying out a detailed condition report of the cetacean skeletons, it is useful to have an understanding of the materials we are likely to encounter, in terms of structure and chemistry. This entry invites you to join in learning about the composition of whale bone and oil. Whale bone (Cetacean) bone is comprised of a composite structure of both an inorganic matrix of mainly hydroxylapatite (a calcium phosphate mineral), providing strength and rigidity, as well as an organic protein ‘scaffolding’ of mainly collagen, facilitating growth and repair (O’Connor 2008, CCI 2010). Collagen is also the structural protein component in cartilage between the whale vertebrae and attached to the fins of both the Killer Whale and the Dolphin. Relative proportions in the bone composition (affecting density), are linked with the feeding habits and mechanical stresses typically endured by bones of particular whale types. A Sperm Whale (Physeter macrocephalus Linnaeus, 1758) skeleton (toothed) thus has a higher mineral value (~67%) than a Fin Whale (Balaenoptera physalus Linnaeus, 1758) (baleen) (~60%) (Turner Walker 2012). The internal structure of bone can be divided into compact and cancellous bone. In whales, load-bearing structures such as mandibles and upper limb bones (e.g. humerus, sternum) are largely composed of compact bone (Turner Walker 2012). This consists of lamella concentrically deposited around the longitudinal axis and is permeated by fluid carrying channels (O’Connor 2008). Cancellous (spongy) bone, with a highly porous angular network of trabeculae, is less stiff and thus found in whale ribs and vertebrae (Turner Walker 2012). Whale oil Whales not only carry a thick layer of fat (blubber) in the soft tissue of their body for heat insulation and as a food store while they are alive, but also hold large oil (lipid) reserves in their porous bones. Following maceration of the whale skeleton after death to remove the soft tissue, the bones retain a high lipid content (Higgs et. al 2010). Particularly bones with a spongy (porous) structure have a high capacity to hold oil-rich marrow. Comparative data of various whale species suggests the skull, particularly the cranium and mandible bones are particularly oil rich. Along the vertebral column, the lipid content is reduced, particularly in the thoracic vertebrae (~10-25%), yet greatly increases from the lumbar to the caudal vertebrae (~40-55%). The chest area (scapula, sternum and ribs) show a mid-range lipid content (~15-30%), with vertically orientated ribs being more heavily soaked lower down (Turner Walker 2012, Higgs et. al 2010). Whale oil is largely composed of triglycerides (molecules of fatty acids attached to a glycerol molecule). In Arctic whales a higher proportion of unsaturated, versus saturated fatty acids make up the lipid. Unsaturated fatty acids (with double or triple carbon bonds causing chain kinks, preventing close packing (solidifying) of molecules), are more likely to be liquid (oil), versus solid (fat) at room temperature (Smith and March 2007). Objects Made From the Whaling Industry We all know that men set forth in sailing ships and risked their lives to harpoon whales on the open seas throughout the 1800s. And while Moby Dick and other tales have made whaling stories immortal, people today generally don't appreciate that the whalers were part of a well-organized industry. The ships that set out from ports in New England roamed as far as the Pacific in hunt of specific species of whales. Adventure may have been the draw for some whalers, but for the captains who owned whaling ships, and the investors which financed voyages, there was a considerable monetary payoff. The gigantic carcasses of whales were chopped and boiled down and turned into products such as the fine oil needed to lubricate increasing advanced machine tools. And beyond the oil derived from whales, even their bones, in an era before the invention of plastic, was used to make a wide variety of consumer goods. In short, whales were a valuable natural resource the same as wood, minerals, or petroleum we now pump from the ground. Oil From Whale’s Blubber Oil was the main product sought from whales, and it was used to lubricate machinery and to provide illumination by burning it in lamps. When a whale was killed, it was towed to the ship and its blubber, the thick insulating fat under its skin, would be peeled and cut from its carcass in a process known as “flensing.” The blubber was minced into chunks and boiled in large vats on board the whaling ship, producing oil. The oil taken from whale blubber was packaged in casks and transported back to the whaling ship’s home port (such as New Bedford, Massachusetts, the busiest American whaling port in the mid-1800s). From the ports it would be sold and transported across the country and would find its way into a huge variety of products. Whale oil, in addition to be used for lubrication and illumination, was also used to manufacture soaps, paint, and varnish. Whale oil was also utilized in some processes used to manufacture textiles and rope. Spermaceti, a Highly Regarded Oil A peculiar oil found in the head of the sperm whale, spermaceti, was highly prized. The oil was waxy, and was commonly used in making candles. In fact, candles made of spermaceti were considered the best in the world, producing a bright clear flame without an excess of smoke. Spermaceti was also used, distilled in liquid form, as an oil to fuel lamps. The main American whaling port, New Bedford, Massachusetts, was thus known as "The City That Lit the World." When John Adams was the ambassador to Great Britain before serving as president he recorded in his diary a conversation about spermaceti he had with the British Prime Minister William Pitt. Adams, keen to promote the New England whaling industry, was trying to convince the British to import spermaceti sold by American whalers, which the British could use to fuel street lamps. The British were not interested. In his diary, Adams wrote that he told Pitt, “the fat of the spermaceti whale gives the clearest and most beautiful flame of any substance that is known in nature, and we are surprised you prefer darkness, and consequent robberies, burglaries, and murders in your streets to receiving as a remittance our spermaceti oil.” Despite the failed sales pitch John Adams made in the late 1700s, the American whaling industry boomed in the early to mid-1800s. And spermaceti was a major component of that success. Spermaceti could be refined into a lubricant that was ideal for precision machinery. The machine tools that made the growth of industry possible in the United States were lubricated, and essentially made possible, by oil derived from spermaceti. Baleen, or "Whalebone" The bones and teeth of various species of whales were used in a number of products, many of them common implements in a 19th century household. Whales are said to have produced “the plastic of the 1800s.” The "bone" of the whale which was most commonly used wasn’t technically a bone, it was baleen, a hard material arrayed in large plates, like gigantic combs, in the mouths of some species of whales. The purpose of the baleen is to act as a sieve, catching tiny organisms in sea water, which the whale consumes as food. As baleen was tough yet flexible, it could be used in a number of practical applications. And it became commonly known as "whalebone." Perhaps the most common use of whalebone was in the manufacture of corsets, which fashionable ladies in the 1800s wore to compress their waistlines. One typical corset advertisement from the 1800s proudly proclaims, “Real Whalebone Only Used.” Whalebone was also used for collar stays, buggy whips, and toys. Its remarkable flexibility even caused it to be used as the springs in early typewriters. The comparison to plastic is apt. Think of common items which today might be made of plastic, and it's likely that similar items in the 1800s would have been made of whalebone. Baleen whales do not have teeth. But the teeth of other whales, such as the sperm whale, would be used as ivory in such products as chess pieces, piano keys, or the handles of walking sticks. Pieces of scrimshaw, or carved whale's teeth, would probably be the best remembered use of whale's teeth. However, the carved teeth were created to pass the time on whaling voyages and were never a mass production item. Their relative rarity, of course, is why genuine pieces of 19th century scrimshaw are considered to be valuable collectibles today. Reference: McNamara, Robert. "Objects Made From the Whaling Industry." ThoughtCo, Jul. 31, 2021, thoughtco.com/products-produced-from-whales-1774070.Whale bone during the 17th, 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries was an important industry providing an important commodity. Whales from these times provided everything from lighting & machine oils to using the animal's bones for use in corsets, collar stays, buggy whips, and many other everyday items then in use.Whale rib bone with advanced stage of calcification as indicated by brittleness. None.warrnambool, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village, whale bones, whale skeleton, whales, whale bone, corsets, toys, whips, whaleling industry, maritime fishing, whalebone -
Federation University Historical Collection
Object, Mounted Caribou (Rangifer tarandus)
This specimen possesses asymmetric brow tines, one of which is palmate. This flattened tine is commonly referred to as a "shovel," and is a typical feature of reindeer. It is not found in other cervids. The nose of red deer is also bare and leathery (like that of a cow), while the nose of reindeer is covered with hair, as is the case with this specimen. There appears to be a small patch of damage where the hair has been rubbed off. taxidermy, stuffed animal, deer, ten pointer, antlers, caribou, reindeer, rangifer tarandus -
The Beechworth Burke Museum
Geological specimen - Mangan Hedenbergite
This specimen was recovered from Broken Hill, NSW. It was given the name Mangan Hedenbergite in 1819 by Jöns Jakob Berzelius in honor of Mr. Anders Ludvig of Hedenberg who was the first to define hedenbergite as a mineral. Hedenbergite, belongs in the pyroxene group having a monoclinic crystal system. The mineral is extremely rarely found as a pure substance. Mangan Hedenbergite is a manganese bearing variety of Hedenbergite. Manganese is the world’s fourth most used mineral after iron, aluminium, and copper primarily because it has no satisfactory substitute in its major applications. Globally, the steel industry is the primary user of manganese metal, utilizing it as an alloy to enhance the strength and workability of steel and in the manufacture of tin cans. Manganese is a key component of certain widely used aluminium alloys and, in oxide form, dry cell batteries used in electric vehicles. These batteries are in high demand. Another potential use for manganese may as an additive to help coat and protect a car’s engine. Manganese is also used for non-metallurgical purposes such as plant fertilizers, animal feed, and colorants for bricks. This specimen is part of a larger collection of geological and mineral specimens collected from around Australia (and some parts of the world) and donated to the Burke Museum between 1868-1880. A large percentage of these specimens were collected in Victoria as part of the Geological Survey of Victoria that begun in 1852 (in response to the Gold Rush) to study and map the geology of Victoria. Collecting geological specimens was an important part of mapping and understanding the scientific makeup of the earth. Many of these specimens were sent to research and collecting organisations across Australia, including the Burke Museum, to educate and encourage further study.A hand-sized mineral specimen in shades of silver and blackmanganese, open cut mine, manganese ore processing, bell bay, tasmania, northern territory, steel industry, zinc-carbon batteries, alkaline batteries, tin cans -
Emerald Museum & Nobelius Heritage Park
Pincers for leading large animal by the nose
Tool made of two pieces of metal with blunt concave jaws that are arranged like the blades of scissors, used for gripping and pulling things. Iron handles 15cm long, with hole cut into the gripping end. The pincers have round, spherical ends for inserting into the nostrils. -
Emerald Museum & Nobelius Heritage Park
Large Animal Pincers
Used for leading bullocks, by the nose.Wrought iron. Long handles with rolled over metal at the end. -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Cutting, The Sun News-Pictorial, Melbourne, One Thousand Pounds to Sanctuary, 28 September 1948
Interim grant to Sanctuary to help mend fencing and transport of animals.PhotocopyInterim grant to Sanctuary to help mend fencing and transport of animals.1940s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Cutting, The Age, Melbourne, Sanctuary Not to Replace Zoo, 26 March 1949
The Sanctuary is to be retained exclusively for native birds and animals. A committee to be formed to take charge of the Sanctuary.photocopyThe Sanctuary is to be retained exclusively for native birds and animals. A committee to be formed to take charge of the Sanctuary.1940s -
Healesville Sanctuary Heritage Centre
Newspaper - Cutting, The Argus, Melbourne, Animal Sanctuary Needs Help, 26 February 1949
Petrol restrictions and no Sunday train is restricting visitors to Healesville.Photocopy two pagesPetrol restrictions and no Sunday train is restricting visitors to Healesville.1940s