Loans | AMNH https://www.amnh.org/research/anthropology/policies-links/loans
loans objects to museums and AMNH-approved exhibition venues
loans objects to museums and AMNH-approved exhibition venues
loans objects to museums and AMNH-approved exhibition venues
loans objects to museums and AMNH-approved exhibition venues
Margaret Holzer is an online instructor for Seminars on Science, the Museum’s online professional learning program for educators.
educators in local, state, national, and international venues
Share Museum content with your audiences through traveling exhibitions, planetarium shows, IP, books, and more.
To date, more than 433 venues have presented Museum-produced
AMNH-Bard Research Fellowship in Museum Anthropology.
collaborative projects and thinking about public venues
Einstein is made possible through the generous support of Jack and Susan Rudin and the Skirball Foundation, and of the Corporate Tour Sponsor, TIAA-CREF.TIAA-CREFThe American Museum…
AMNH, Einstein is scheduled to appear at two U.S. venues
Discover the Gottesman Research Library has a conservation laboratory where the latest preservation technology is used to protect its unique collections.
arrival and installation of Library materials at other venues
Microsculpture is a 2D traveling exhibition featuring high resolution portraits of insects to present a unique perspective on the insect world.
Biss The flexible design of Microsculpture allows venues
Information about Anthropology Internship Program, Exhibition & Study Loans, Research Access Policy; links to related websites.
loans objects to museums and AMNH-approved exhibition venues
Dr. Ian Tattersall is Curator Emeritus of Biological Anthropology. He carried out both primatological and paleontological fieldwork in Madagascar, Vietnam, Surinam, Yemen and Mauritius. His current research interest lies in systematics within the genus Homo and in the origin of modern human cognition.
He lectures widely at venues around the world, and,
Out of Dr. Whiteley’s research on the relationship between matrilineal kinship, Hopi ritual sodalities, and the Orayvi Split grew an interest in two mirrored kinship systems of the "Crow-Omaha" type.
presented some of the results of this research in several venues