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Date: | Fri, 21 Jul 2000 19:41:23 -0700 |
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Alas, I also live within blocks of a museum with about a million shells
in thier collection...never on display, and with a very tightly-closed
policy on letting visitors view the collection. I've never seen it.
Has anyone out there ever seen the Vancouver Museum's shells? How can
it be arranged, or should I just keep dreaming...
Peter Egerton
Vancouver, BC, Canada
At 12:27 PM 7/22/00 +1000, you wrote:
>The Australian Museum has a very large research collection and a malacology
>department of international standing. Yet, I am yet to see any (read ANY)
>shells in the exhibition area. The display people in the museum are into
>touchy-feely, minimalist exhibitions. What a pity
>
>Patty
>
>Bookshop: http://www.booksofnature.com
>
>Publishing and info site: http://www.capricornica.com
>
>
>Capricornica Publications/Books of Nature
>P.O. Box 345
>Lindfield NSW 2070
>Australia
>
>ABN 39 003 916 210
>
>phone/fax: 02 9415 8098 international: +61 2 9415 8098
>mobile 0412 865030
>
>E-mail: [log in to unmask]
>
>
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Peter Egerton, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Collector of worldwide Mollusca,
lifetime student of zoology and computers.
Step into my website:
http://www.intergate.bc.ca/personal/seashell/index.html
(includes Seashells of British Columbia, links and my resume)
-Links to add, remove, alter? Just ask!
-This is an on-going project.
-Suggestions always welcome :-)
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