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What on Earth?
Snakes: Super senses, stretchy jaws and deadly venom
Get the answers to some of the most frequently asked questions about these fascinating, slithering reptiles.
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What on Earth?
Do birds pee?
What are those milky white splatters – are they pee or poo?
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Collections
Our LGBTQ+ video tour
Take a virtual tour of the Natural History Museum and explore the astonishing diversity of the natural world.
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Dinosaurs
What happens when you find a dinosaur?
If you know what you’re looking at, little bits of bone can add up to something big.
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Dinosaurs
The Isle of Wight: Welcome to Dinosaur Island
Discover a treasure trove of fossils just off Britain’s south coast.
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Fossil hunting: How to find fossils on the beach
All it takes is a bit of practice and plenty of patience.
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Collections
Hidden Treasures: Season two of our behind-the-scenes live streams
Explore our collections and discover some of the many specimens you won't see on a regular visit to the Museum.
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Dinosaurs
Why were dinosaurs so big? The secrets of titanosaurs' super size
Dinosaurs are the largest land animals to ever live. Titanosaurs were the biggest of them all. Explore how they were able to grow to such a size.
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Collections
Hidden Treasures: Season one of our behind-the-scenes live streams
Catch up on season one of our interactive behind-the-scenes live stream.
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Finding common sense with Ananse, the West African spider-god
Every culture in the world has at least one mythical character who, in some way, represents wisdom, knowledge or just plain common sense.
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British wildlife
How to pond dip
Pond dipping is a wonderful way to look at the creatures that live in and around pond water.
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British wildlife
How to make a log pile to provide shelter for garden wildlife
A log pile can give home and shelter to some of the smaller inhabitants of your garden.
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British wildlife
How to make a small wildlife pond
A garden pond is one of the best ways you can help Britain's wildlife. You can create one in even the tiniest of gardens.
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British wildlife
How to make a bird bath
Birds need access to water year-round. Help them out by building a simple garden bird bath.
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Anthropocene
Mountain chickens: how we almost lost the Caribbean's largest frogs
The mountain chicken is teetering on the brink of extinction, but we may now have a way to save them.
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Anthropocene
How to make a worm composter
Turn your kitchen food scraps into fantastic fertiliser by making a wormery.
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British wildlife
Environmental DNA: what is it and how can it help us protect wildlife?
Find out what eDNA is and how it can be used for conservation.
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British wildlife
How to grow a wildflower pot for pollinators
Growing native wildflowers helps provide the right food for pollinating insects, making life better for your local wildlife.
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Anthropocene
How to grow a loofah
For a summer gardening project and a sustainable swap, luffa fruits can be grown to be used in place of synthetic sponges.
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What on Earth?
Immortal jellyfish: the secret to cheating death
Meet the tiny, gelatinous animal that has found a way to live forever.
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British wildlife
How to make a bee hotel
Give solitary bees a home by making this simple, DIY bee hotel.
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British wildlife
How to make fat balls for birds
Help your local wild birds to survive winter by putting out these nutritious fat balls.
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What on Earth?
Why do goats faint and scream?
Discover the reality behind the ever-popular videos of screaming and fainting goats.
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How to make animal paper snowflakes
Follow our instructions to make animal and other natural history inspired paper snowflakes.
With 10 free templates for you to download and print.
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British wildlife
Bringing back the carnivorous great sundew and other rare plants
How people power is saving plants from local extinction in North West England.
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How to make a salt dough ammonite fossil
If you can't get out to the beach to find fossils, why not make your own ammonites instead?
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What on Earth?
How seals' whiskers help them hunt underwater
Seals have specially shaped whiskers that enable them to hunt effectively even in poor visual conditions.
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British wildlife
How to make a bug hotel: a ladybird lodge
This simple DIY insect hotel is perfect for ladybirds looking for somewhere to hibernate in winter.
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British wildlife
Lugworm poos and the secrets they hold
Have you ever noticed the small mounds of sand on a beach at low tide? These are lugworm poos, and they hold a secret.
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How to make an easy Sun print
Making Sun prints is a fun activity that can turn leaves and flowers into simple but distinctive artworks.
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British wildlife
How to make a footprint tunnel that reveals what wildlife visits your garden
Have you ever wondered what wildlife wanders through your garden when you're not watching?
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What on Earth?
Bombardier beetles and their caustic chemical cannon
Meet the beetles that fire a boiling chemical brew at predators that get too close for comfort.
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British wildlife
How to make a simple butterfly feeder
Put on a butterfly buffet and watch these intriguing insects feeding.
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British wildlife
How to grow a cress caterpillar
Create a colourful caterpillar and grow your own food all in one activity.
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British wildlife
Ways to help frogs and toads
Frogs and toads are often spotted in UK gardens, but some are struggling. Find out how you can help.
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How to make a simple origami frog
Find out how to make a very easy folded paper jumping frog.
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British wildlife
How to make and use a nature journal to record your wildlife observations
Keeping a nature journal is a great way to record any nature you see.
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British wildlife
How to make a bird box
Putting up a nesting box could be a big help to your local birds. Our simple design is ideal for small songbirds and sparrows.
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Anthropocene
How to make beeswax wraps
Making these reusable food wraps will help you reduce your single-use plastic waste.
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British wildlife
Seven simple ways to create a wildlife-friendly garden
Find out how to help urban nature and attract more wildlife to your garden.
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Biodiversity
Flies: The compelling case for why they’re actually fabulous
Did you know that there are more species of fly in the UK than there are mammals on the planet? And they perform some pretty important jobs.
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Anthropocene
Three ways to go eco-friendly at Christmas
Here are three ways to reduce plastic waste during the festive season.
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How to make a volcano
Follow our guide to make a simple volcano from a plastic bottle and watch it erupt.
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British wildlife
How to make a hedgehog house
Follow our instructions to make a simple hedgehog home.
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Dinosaurs
How are dinosaur fossils formed?
Even though dinosaurs lived millions of years ago, we know about them thanks to fossils. Watch our animation to find out how dinosaur fossils formed.
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British wildlife
How to go rockpooling
Want to explore the life lurking in seashore rock pools? Find out what you need and what you might see.
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News
Mantellisaurus: 3D-scanning one of the most complete British dinosaurs
A usually inaccessible dinosaur will be available to researchers around the world.
20 August 2019 -
British wildlife
How to make a pitfall trap to catch insects and other minibeasts
Want to find out what small creatures are crawling around your garden? Follow our steps to set up a simple pitfall trap.
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What on Earth?
Ten reasons to love echidnas
Discover the many interesting quirks of the elusive echidna.
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British wildlife
How to press flowers
Follow our simple instructions to prepare pressed flowers for craft projects or create your own plant herbarium.
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What on Earth?
The 1883 Krakatau eruption: a year of blue Moons
The mystery of blue Moons lies in the ashes of volcanic eruptions.
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British wildlife
360° Scottish beaver trail
Join us on a 360° loch-side walk in Knapdale to look for signs of beavers and learn more about these ecosystem engineers.
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British wildlife
How water voles left their riverside homes for Glasgow grasslands
Water voles in Glasgow have left the riverbank behind in search of new homes.
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Oceans
Do sharks lay eggs?
Although most sharks give birth to live young, a few lay oddly shaped eggs that occasionally wash up on beaches.
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Dinosaurs
How to draw a dinosaur
Learn how to create a cartoon T. rex. Plus find out how palaeoartists draw dinosaurs.
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Collections
Beetles and bloodsuckers
Go behind the scenes at the Museum and discover the huge variety of beetles and parasites in the collection.
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Dinosaurs
How did Tyrannosaurus rex use its arms?
T. rex forelimbs were tiny but surprisingly muscular - so how were they used?
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British wildlife
How to make a bird feeder
Follow our simple guide to building a bird feeder for your garden from a reused plastic bottle.
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What on Earth?
What is natural selection?
Natural selection is one of the core processes of evolution - but how does it work and will it ever end?
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What on Earth?
How do polar bears stay warm?
Discover how polar bears survive in the Arctic, even when temperatures fall far below -30°C.
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Collections
Space, specimens and dating strategies
This month on #NHM_Live we're putting animal dating strategies to the test.
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What on Earth?
What is more impressive than a walrus's tusks?
Walruses have a feature that stands out in size - and it's one that humans completely lack.
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Collections
Fishy faces, fur and feathers
Meet some faces that only an ichthyologist could love and catch up on the latest natural history news.
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Exploring the mysteries of Earth's underwater caves
Cave divers are at the forefront of the search for life in the planet's deepest and darkest subterranean worlds.
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Collections
Specimen stores and lights at night
Find out what can happen when fieldwork doesn't go exactly as planned, and how to do a simple DIY science project at home.
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Dinosaurs
Can you find dinosaurs in Ireland?
Why have so few dinosaur fossils been found in Ireland? It's all to do with the island's geological history.
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British wildlife
Night life: how to spot insects in the dark
What nocturnal insects will you find where you live?
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Oceans
Why would a worm live with its enemy?
Deep in the ocean a species of worm is living life on the edge, making its home inside an animal that could eat it.
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Collections
Spiders, cetaceans and skeletons
Museum experts catch us up on some of the latest natural history news.
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What on Earth?
Giant isopods: curious crustaceans on the ocean floor
A curator unravels the mystery of the woodlouse's gargantuan deep-sea cousin.
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What on Earth?
Wildlife Photographer of the Year: blood-loving birds of the Galápagos
When resources run short, the sharp-beaked finches of Wolf Island turn into vampires to survive.
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Oceans
Octopuses keep surprising us - here are eight examples how
They have blue blood, three hearts and a doughnut-shaped brain. But these aren’t even the most unusual discoveries made about octopuses!
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British wildlife
Dormice use their whiskers to 'see' in the dark
Find out how these arboreal rodents use their whiskers to navigate at night.
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Anthropocene
Flesh-footed shearwaters: The chicks choking on a toxic diet of ocean plastic
The birds that live on Lord Howe Island are facing death by ocean plastic.
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British wildlife
360° urban nature search
Join a bioblitz search for local wildlife in the ruins of Weoley Castle, Birmingham.
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British wildlife
There's more to birdsong than meets the ears
Would a pigeon in London sound the same as a pigeon in Birmingham?
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News
The secrets of frog vision are finally being revealed
Museum scientists are travelling the globe to understand how frogs see the world.
6 August 2018 -
Space
The search for life on Mars
To help us tell fact from science fiction, scientists and engineers involved in the ExoMars 2020 program discuss the latest on the search for life on Mars.
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Dinosaurs
Dinosauria: how the 'terrible lizards' got their name
Did you know the word 'dinosaur' wasn't coined until 1842?
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Oceans
Explore a 360 panorama of Antarctica
Join Dr Adrian Glover as he journeys to the site of a collapsed Antarctic ice shelf. Experience the awe-inspiring view from the ship deck.
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Who's afraid of the dark?
Explore some of nature's most extreme sensory adaptations with leading scientists from the Museum.
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Oceans
What lies beneath?
Watch for an exclusive peek behind the scenes at the Museum's Tank Room.
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Watch a pterosaur fly
This animal is Anhanguera, a flying reptile that lived with the dinosaurs. Have a look at how it might have flown.
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Dinosaurs
A Stegosaurus brought to life
Watch a virtual Stegosaurus walk around as Sir David Attenborough explains how this dinosaur would have moved.
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What on Earth?
Why do some butterflies and moths have eyespots?
Discover how some species effectively use their colourful wings to deter predators.
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What on Earth?
The man who injects himself with venom
Steve Ludwin explains why he has been injecting himself with snake venom for decades.
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Dinosaurs
Why are birds the only surviving dinosaurs?
Watch our animation to find out.
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Dinosaurs
What's the coolest dinosaur?
Watch four of our dinosaur experts battle it out for the top spot.
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What on Earth?
Flies are saving your chocolate cravings
Bees' pollinating prowess often overshadows many of the insects working just as hard as them.
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What on Earth?
Face-to-face with spitting cobras
Have you ever seen a cobra spit venom in super slow motion?
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British wildlife
Out of the woodwork: the great capricorn beetle
Meet the beetles that were unexpectedly found in Cambridgeshire, despite having been extinct in Britain for thousands of years.
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360° fossil-hunting adventure
Go on a virtual fossil hunt along Charmouth Beach.
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What on Earth?
The sting of love
Meet some of the animals whose search for a mate may actually be physically painful.
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Space
How did the Moon form?
Before the Earth and Moon, there was a proto-Earth and Theia. Museum planetary science researcher Prof Sara Russell explains the origins of Earth's closest companion.
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What on Earth?
Superior senses in the dark
From bioluminescent lures to infrared abilities, meet some of the animals that have found ways to master life in the dark.
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What on Earth?
How is a mouse like a giraffe?
They may certainly look different, but mice and giraffes are more similar than you might think.
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What on Earth?
Hydrothermal vents: survival at the ocean's hot springs
What is a hydrothermal vent and did life on Earth begin at these underwater locations?
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Collections
The platypus puzzle
Watch Dr Ronald Jenner explore the venomous puzzle that the platypus poses.
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What is a coprolite?
Fossil poo may not be a glamorous fossil find, but it can reveal a lot about prehistoric animals.
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Human evolution
Bringing a Neanderthal to life: the making of our model
Discover the science and art involved in making the Museum's Neanderthal and early modern human models.
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The last of the mammoths
Were woolly mammoths a victim of hunting by humans or did their extinction have more to do with an apparent fondness for buttercups?
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What on Earth?
Can frogs be venomous?
Meet the amphibians with an unusual defence tactic.
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Human evolution
Cheddar Man: Mesolithic Britain's blue-eyed boy
What did humans in Britain look like 10,000 years ago?
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Collections
How to restore a 135-year-old-sunfish
Find out what it takes to care for an enormous, scientifically irreplaceable fish.
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Human evolution
The cannibals of Gough's Cave
Dr Silvia Bello tells us about the gruesome yet fascinating behaviour of people living in a Somerset cave 14,700 years ago.
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What on Earth?
Why does Rudolph have a red nose?
Dr Erica McAlister hints at why the beloved reindeer may have a bright red nose.
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What on Earth?
Bioluminescence: light in the dark
Lanternfish are one of many animals that light up the ocean with their glowing bodies.
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Behind the scenes: The making of Venom
Go behind the scenes to find out what it takes put on a major exhibition at the Museum.
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News
Rescuing a 199-million-year-old ammonite graveyard
Scientists saved scientifically important slabs from an ammonite fossil bed after they were damaged by storms.
3 November 2017 -
What on Earth?
Do vampire bats drink blood?
Do vampire bats really deserve their blood-sucking reputation?
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British wildlife
Why do wasps build nests?
Most social wasps aren't fussy when it comes to finding a spot to settle down.
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Oceans
The fish that's also a pearl
Watch Andreia Salvador, Curator of Marine Mollusca, take a look at one of the Museum's most extraordinary and precious pearls.
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What on Earth?
The bizarre love life of the anglerfish
Watch a fish curator get up close and personal with one of the deep sea's most unusual partnerships.
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Collections
The art of preserving a fish
Find out how Museum scientists used a new technique to preserve this enormous blue marlin forever.
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Anthropocene
Seaweeds: a hidden habitat under threat
Climate change could bring an end to algae and seaweed.
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Collections
The blue whale: a three-year labour of love
Join Museum scientists as they reflect on becoming part of this specimen's giant story.
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Collections
Missouri Leviathan: The making of an American mastodon
From touring spectacle to Museum star: hear the hidden history behind this ancient mammal skeleton.
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Oceans
A blue whale's banquet
Rare drone footage could prove vital for research into the meals of the largest animals on the planet.
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Oceans
A window into the world of seaweeds
Professor Juliet Brodie explains why seaweed forests are so important to coastlines all over the world.
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Dinosaurs
Dinosaur world tour
Find out about dinosaur discoveries from around the world with Museum expert Prof Paul Barrett.
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Oceans
Life in the pod: the social lives of whales
Why do whales sing? Scientists have only just begun to decipher the meaning of these underwater melodies.
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Collections
Skeletons reveal their secrets
Bone detectives at the Museum are uncovering the secrets of life and death in London over 5,000 years.
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Collections
Tall order: rehousing a taxidermy giraffe
Go behind the scenes with Museum staff as they try to fit a taxidermy giraffe through some tight spaces.
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Oceans
Corals: up close and personal
Glimpse some of the beautiful coral specimens in our collection and explore why coral diversity is important.
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Sensational Butterflies: bringing the jungle to London
Find out how we prepare the tropical butterfly house and keep the hundreds of butterflies soaring.
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Dinosaurs
Dinosaur family tree gets major makeover
Dinosaurs have a new family tree. Find out how it has changed and what the new tree reveals about dinosaurs' origins and evolution.
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Collections
A whale of a time capsule
Discover how crumpled newspapers have turned a blue whale skeleton into a historical treasure trove.
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Dinosaurs
A Diplodocus deconstructed
Moving a dinosaur is never easy. Watch as Museum conservators pack Dippy the Diplodocus into boxes, one bone at a time.
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Dinosaurs
Taking Dippy down: the first steps
Lorraine Cornish, Head of Conservation, prepares to dismantle the Diplodocus skeleton.
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Collections
Colour in the collections: bird taxidermy
The art of taxidermy has become fashionable again in recent years. But it has always been scientifically useful. Bird curator Hein van Grouw demonstrates how it's done.
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Dinosaurs
How to bring a dinosaur to life in technicolour
Find out how scientists and a palaeoartist created a life-size model of Psittacosaurus featuring real colour patterns, and what this revealed about the dinosaur's life.
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News
Blue whale conservation team wins prestigious award
The conservators preparing the Museum's blue whale skeleton for its move into Hintze Hall have received a prize for their contribution to the public's understanding of conservation.
4 June 2018 -
Beautiful British orchids: is climate change affecting them?
Dr Mark Spencer explains why it's important to find out.
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The power of red
How do you feel when you see the colour red? Angry, amorous, energized? Why might that be?
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Squid art in squid ink
The Museum's giant squid specimen so inspired one visiting artist that she felt compelled to draw it. Life size.
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Parasites in motion: schistosomiasis
Follow the complex life cycle of this life-threatening parasite.
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Audio slideshow: Rare Treasures book
Library curator Andrea Hart talks about this collection of the Museum's most highly prized natural history literature.
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Space
Michael Benson: reflections on Saturn
Otherworlds artist Michael Benson discusses his images of Saturn - 'one of the most extraordinary things ever seen in nature'.
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Space
How the Moon got its spots
Discover how a surface mottled with dark patches reveals the Moon's volcanic past.
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Collections
Whale move: conservation commences
Watch as our blue whale is moved into storage and the conservators start their work.
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Space
Exploring Martian mysteries in lceland's volcanoes
Learn how Iceland's volcanic terrain is shaping the way scientists explore the surface of Mars.
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Pickle jars and precious specimens
Step behind the scenes of the Museum’s spirit collection with curators Oliver Crimmen and James Maclaine.
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Space
Discovering Earth: science meets art
Learn how space exploration sheds light on the delicate beauty of life on Earth.
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Space
Michael Benson: The art of Otherworlds
Artist Michael Benson explores the 'alchemy' used to transform space agency data into colour images of our solar system.
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Space
The storm and the satellite
Artist Michael Benson explores one of his favourite images: the moon Europa photographed above Jupiter's Great Red Spot.
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Space
Mystery of the Barwell meteorite
Discover how a meteorite fragment in the Museum collection hid a secret about the origins of our solar system.
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Human evolution
Tracing our genetic ancestry
Our DNA offers us the chance to look into our ancient past. Discover what six celebrities learned when they had their DNA analysed.
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Human evolution
The oldest human footprints in Europe
Follow the progress of a team of scientists as they realise they have uncovered human footprints that are around 900,000 years old.
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Human evolution
The Neanderthal in us
Many of us carry around two per cent Neanderthal DNA in our genes. Prof Chris Stringer discusses why and what it means.
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Human evolution
How the Neanderthals got their big noses
Prof Chris Stringer discusses a Museum fossil that helps explain why Neanderthals looked different to us.
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Space
Could life have formed on Mars?
Museum geologists investigate Iceland's volcanic landscape, and ask whether life could have formed under similar conditions on Mars.
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British wildlife
Looking at past habitats through a modern lens
The rediscovery of early twentieth century photographs in the Museum collections has led to an innovative artistic collaboration.
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Collections
Examining the blue whale: the move begins
Go behind the scenes as the first bones are taken down from the blue whale skeleton.
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Collections
Teaser: staging set for blue whale skeleton move
Watch the scaffolding rising around the blue whale skeleton as the Museum gears up for the move.
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Spot the difference: butterfly or moth?
Step behind the scenes of our butterflies and moths collection for tips on how to tell the two apart.
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Oceans
Join a dive to see the largest corals on Earth
Follow the Catlin Seaview Survey team in American Samoa as they dive in search of Big Momma, the world's largest recorded coral.
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Detective work to tackle debilitating disease in Zanzibar
Follow our researchers’ quest to identify the parasite-carrying culprit.
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British wildlife
Sneaky orchids manipulate bees for pollination
Discover the flowers that go to extraordinary lengths to attract insect pollinators.
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Dinosaurs
Putting the skin on Stegosaurus
Find out how palaeoartist Robert Nicholls brought the Museum’s Stegosaurus specimen back to life.
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Dinosaurs
The Swindon stegosaur
Discover Dacentrurus - one of the first stegosaur fossils to be found - which hides in plain sight in the Museum.
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Oceans
Why are coral reefs so important?
Discover some of the huge benefits they provide humans and other life on Earth in our infographic video.
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Anthropocene
Paradise in peril
Coral reef research and conservation experts share their passion, hopes and fears for this underwater paradise.
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Oceans
The smart, the strange and the dangerous: life on a coral reef
When you live in a secret city of the sea, it’s important to keep your wits about you…
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Collections
Giant squid: from the deep sea to display
Curator Jon Ablett tells the tale of how an elusive monster from the deep came to be one of our popular attractions.
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Anthropocene
Caribbean coral crusaders
Caribbean reefs are among the most damaged in the world. Find out how young people in the Bahamas are taking action.
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Oceans
Unlocking the secrets of coral spawning
Witness one of nature's most elusive wonders - the synchronised mass spawning of corals.
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British wildlife
Earthworms: humble underground heroes
Museum scientist and champion of earthworms Emma Sherlock shares her passion for these vital invertebrates.
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Oceans
Mystery of the hairy anglerfish’s huge stomach
Follow Museum scientists as they solve the decade-long mystery of a rare anglerfish’s bulging stomach.
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Collections
Sharing the Museum collection, one butterfly at a time
Digitising our collection is leading to breakthroughs in our understanding of the natural world.
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Birth of the blue morphos
Witness the moment these delicate butterflies emerge from their chrysalises in a time-lapse video.
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What on Earth?
How to unwrap an animal mummy without touching it
Join Museum scientists as they reveal a secret kept hidden for over 2,000 years.
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Oceans
Corals: builders of the reef
Glimpse the extraordinary lives of corals.
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Lego tool helps scientists study delicate insect specimens
A creative tool devised by Museum scientists will make it far easier, quicker and cheaper to compare fragile specimens.
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Dinosaurs
Studying the Stegosaurus skeleton
Get a behind-the-scenes look at the scientific examination of the world's most complete Stegosaurus specimen.
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Pictures worth a thousand words
Find out how the Museum’s traditional artworks and images made using modern techniques help shape our understanding of the natural world.
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Fishing for new life
Meet some of the strange life forms that Museum scientists are uncovering in the peat swamps of southeast Asia.
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Oceans
How to pickle a shark
Follow the journey of a large shark specimen from a beach in Northumberland to being sealed in our spirit collection.
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Biodiversity
Plants under pressure
One fifth of the world's plant species are threatened with extinction. Museum scientists and collaborators discuss this shocking statistic.
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Biodiversity
Isles of Scilly field trip: collecting specimens, measuring change
Museum scientists travelled to the Isles of Scilly, Cornwall, to collect fresh specimens to improve our collections.
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Biodiversity
Borneo biodiversity count
Join Museum scientists as they survey the incredible diversity of invertebrates living in the rainforests of Borneo.
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Oceans
Staghorn survivors: the world's most successful coral?
Layers of rock off the coast of southern England reveal surprising clues about the past and future of today’s coral reefs.
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Dinosaurs
Stegosaurus time-lapse
Watch a time-lapse video of the Museum's new Stegosaurus skeleton being put together.
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British wildlife
How to identify a cockchafer May bug
It has a hairy body, orange fan-like antennae and eats roots. Watch the video to find out more.
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British wildlife
Fungi: undervalued jewels of the urban jungle
Fungi expert Mark Spencer reveals striking examples of fungi that flourish in towns and cities.
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Naming nature, putting life in order
How do you name and categorise all life on Earth? Curator Jon Ablett gives an insight into the crucial and never-ending work of taxonomists.
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Collections
On the trail of the Wexford blue whale
Trace the 126-year journey of the blue whale from the sea to Museum.