rowid,dataset_title,publisher,author,dataset_issued,dataset_modified,dataset_description,source,info_url,start_date,end_date,file_title,download_url,format,file_description,file_created,file_modified,file_size,licence 947,Search the Powerhouse Museum Collection,Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences,Powerhouse Museum,2013-05-24T02:09:35.376542,2017-06-19T07:58:15.006073,"Search over 75,000 objects collected from 1880 to the present day. This interactive database contains thousands of zoomable images and research into the Museum's collection, much of it made public for the first time. ",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/bf5a60c5-3340-4cd7-9282-d4db9819e071,,,Search the Powerhouse Museum Collection,https://collection.maas.museum,MUSEUM,,2013-05-23T22:09:50.225808,2013-05-26T22:20:52.738648,20.0,Creative Commons Attribution 946,Powerhouse Museum Collection API,Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences,,2013-05-24T01:43:33.435412,2019-05-30T23:59:59.037949,Application Programming Interface (machine readable) for the Powerhouse Museum's Collections.,data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/bf9df234-7890-4907-94f6-e7872c8f4258,,,Museum of Applied Arts and Science MAAS’s Public API,https://api.maas.museum/docs,api,This has replaced the Powerhouse Museum Collection API,2013-05-23T21:43:56.565263,2013-05-26T22:20:57.279161,20.0,Creative Commons Attribution 945,Powerhouse Museum Collection simplified dataset,Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences,,2013-05-24T01:44:48.361690,2022-01-18T02:43:35.421740,"A single file dataset containing a subset of the metadata of over 75,000 objects in the form of a tab-seperated values spreadsheet.",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/91829aff-594e-4cdf-bc76-bf639335fa26,,,Powerhouse Museum Collection - API,https://api.maas.museum/docs/rest,website link,Website link to view info for the Museum's REST API.,2022-01-18T02:43:35.674920,,,Creative Commons Attribution 944,Powerhouse Museum Collection simplified dataset,Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences,,2013-05-24T01:44:48.361690,2022-01-18T02:43:35.421740,"A single file dataset containing a subset of the metadata of over 75,000 objects in the form of a tab-seperated values spreadsheet.",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/91829aff-594e-4cdf-bc76-bf639335fa26,,,Powerhouse Museum Collection - website,https://collection.maas.museum/,website link,,2013-05-23T21:45:06.647694,2013-05-26T22:20:56.732330,20.0,Creative Commons Attribution 943,OpenGov NSW API,NSW State Archives,,2013-05-28T05:04:20.514798,2015-02-03T06:33:14.130405,"A repository of information published by NSW Government agencies, including Annual Reports and open access information released under the Government Information (Public Access) Act 2009 (GIPA Act).",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/e2c36616-36db-4bb3-a907-87db836481f0,,,OpenGov NSW API,https://www.opengov.nsw.gov.au/api,API,"OpenGov NSW data and functionality are available via an open web API. This service provides additional options for agencies wishing to integrate OpenGov NSW with their own websites. It also means that external developers, and members of the public more broadly, can easily extract and use OpenGov NSW data. For more information, visit: [https://www.opengov.nsw.gov.au/api](https://www.opengov.nsw.gov.au/api)",2013-05-28T01:05:30.921458,,,Creative Commons Attribution 942,Flickr Photostream,NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2013-05-24T01:41:34.299964,2015-10-01T01:49:21.445004,"View, download and reuse photographs from the collections of the NSW State Records Authority.",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/32f00807-077b-45f9-978b-df4f688b1b17,,,Flickr Photostream,https://www.flickr.com/photos/state-records-nsw/,website link,,2014-08-11T23:23:44.269666,,,Creative Commons Attribution 941,Convict Indexes,NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2015-10-01T01:54:53.522981,2015-10-01T02:14:59.600322,"Between 1788 and 1842 about 80,000 convicts were transported to New South Wales. Of these, about 85% were men and 15% were women. Almost two thirds of convicts were English (along with a small number of Scottish and Welsh), with the Irish making up the remaining one third. Convicts were usually given sentences of transportation for seven, 14 years or life. Some convicts in the 1830s received ten-year sentences. About one quarter of the convicts were sentenced to ‘the term of their natural lives’, and a proportion of these had reprieves from the death sentence. These seven indexes contain around 140,000 entries in total.",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/acdd01d0-d700-465c-a183-735c4f139ca0,,,"Index to Tickets of Leave Passports, 1835-69",https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/acdd01d0-d700-465c-a183-735c4f139ca0/resource/128a859e-120f-43e2-8f9f-9aadc05b8745/download/tickets-of-leave-passports-1835-69.csv,CSV,"This dataset contains the following attributes: ID, Surname, First Name, Alias, Vessel, Year, No, Date, Record Type, Citation, Remarks [Click here for more information about this index](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/indexes-to-convict-records/index-to-ticket-of-leave-passports).",2015-10-01T12:14:59.685832,,,Creative Commons Attribution 940,Convict Indexes,NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2015-10-01T01:54:53.522981,2015-10-01T02:14:59.600322,"Between 1788 and 1842 about 80,000 convicts were transported to New South Wales. Of these, about 85% were men and 15% were women. Almost two thirds of convicts were English (along with a small number of Scottish and Welsh), with the Irish making up the remaining one third. Convicts were usually given sentences of transportation for seven, 14 years or life. Some convicts in the 1830s received ten-year sentences. About one quarter of the convicts were sentenced to ‘the term of their natural lives’, and a proportion of these had reprieves from the death sentence. These seven indexes contain around 140,000 entries in total.",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/acdd01d0-d700-465c-a183-735c4f139ca0,,,"Index to Tickets of Leave, Certificates of Emancipation, and Pardons, 1810-19",https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/acdd01d0-d700-465c-a183-735c4f139ca0/resource/82b8128f-b0cf-44ef-b6c5-f4762688b000/download/tickets-of-leave-certificates-of-emancipation-pardons-1810-19.csv,CSV,"This dataset contains the following attributes: ID, Surname, First Name, Alias, Vessel, Year, No, Date, Record Type, Citation, Remarks [Click here for more information about this index](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/indexes-to-convict-records/index-to-tickets-of-leave-certificates-and-pardons).",2015-10-01T12:13:36.362074,,,Creative Commons Attribution 939,Convict Indexes,NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2015-10-01T01:54:53.522981,2015-10-01T02:14:59.600322,"Between 1788 and 1842 about 80,000 convicts were transported to New South Wales. Of these, about 85% were men and 15% were women. Almost two thirds of convicts were English (along with a small number of Scottish and Welsh), with the Irish making up the remaining one third. Convicts were usually given sentences of transportation for seven, 14 years or life. Some convicts in the 1830s received ten-year sentences. About one quarter of the convicts were sentenced to ‘the term of their natural lives’, and a proportion of these had reprieves from the death sentence. These seven indexes contain around 140,000 entries in total.",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/acdd01d0-d700-465c-a183-735c4f139ca0,,,"Index to Tickets of Leave, 1810-75",https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/acdd01d0-d700-465c-a183-735c4f139ca0/resource/386608d7-a103-4440-adb7-adae2f8928db/download/tickets-of-leave-1810-75.csv,CSV,"This dataset contains the following attributes: ID, Surname, First Name, Alias, Vessel, Year, No, Date, Record Type, Citation, Remarks [Click here for more information about this index](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/indexes-to-convict-records/index-to-tickets-of-leave).",2015-10-01T12:11:25.660171,,,Creative Commons Attribution 938,Convict Indexes,NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2015-10-01T01:54:53.522981,2015-10-01T02:14:59.600322,"Between 1788 and 1842 about 80,000 convicts were transported to New South Wales. Of these, about 85% were men and 15% were women. Almost two thirds of convicts were English (along with a small number of Scottish and Welsh), with the Irish making up the remaining one third. Convicts were usually given sentences of transportation for seven, 14 years or life. Some convicts in the 1830s received ten-year sentences. About one quarter of the convicts were sentenced to ‘the term of their natural lives’, and a proportion of these had reprieves from the death sentence. These seven indexes contain around 140,000 entries in total.",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/acdd01d0-d700-465c-a183-735c4f139ca0,,,"Index to Tickets of Exemption from Government Labour, 1827-32",https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/acdd01d0-d700-465c-a183-735c4f139ca0/resource/bd235c5d-0690-441f-ad62-a5fa4eaa3761/download/tickets-of-exemption-from-govt-labor-1827-32.csv,CSV,"This dataset contains the following attributes: ID, Surname, First Name, Alias, Vessel, Year, No, Date, Record Type, Citation, Remarks [Click here for more information about this index](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/indexes-to-convict-records/tickets-of-exemption-from-government-labour).",2015-10-01T12:05:30.634761,,,Creative Commons Attribution 937,Convict Indexes,NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2015-10-01T01:54:53.522981,2015-10-01T02:14:59.600322,"Between 1788 and 1842 about 80,000 convicts were transported to New South Wales. Of these, about 85% were men and 15% were women. Almost two thirds of convicts were English (along with a small number of Scottish and Welsh), with the Irish making up the remaining one third. Convicts were usually given sentences of transportation for seven, 14 years or life. Some convicts in the 1830s received ten-year sentences. About one quarter of the convicts were sentenced to ‘the term of their natural lives’, and a proportion of these had reprieves from the death sentence. These seven indexes contain around 140,000 entries in total.",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/acdd01d0-d700-465c-a183-735c4f139ca0,,,"Index to convict pardons, 1791-1825 and 1837-47",https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/acdd01d0-d700-465c-a183-735c4f139ca0/resource/c3d46577-7ede-4ed0-96cb-9877af4727a2/download/pardons-1791-1825-and-1837-47.csv,CSV,"This dataset contains the following attributes: ID, Surname, First Name, Alias, Vessel, Year, No, Date, Record Type, Citation, Remarks [Click here for more information about this index](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/indexes-to-convict-records/index-to-convict-pardons).",2015-10-01T12:02:20.325069,,,Creative Commons Attribution 936,Convict Indexes,NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2015-10-01T01:54:53.522981,2015-10-01T02:14:59.600322,"Between 1788 and 1842 about 80,000 convicts were transported to New South Wales. Of these, about 85% were men and 15% were women. Almost two thirds of convicts were English (along with a small number of Scottish and Welsh), with the Irish making up the remaining one third. Convicts were usually given sentences of transportation for seven, 14 years or life. Some convicts in the 1830s received ten-year sentences. About one quarter of the convicts were sentenced to ‘the term of their natural lives’, and a proportion of these had reprieves from the death sentence. These seven indexes contain around 140,000 entries in total.",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/acdd01d0-d700-465c-a183-735c4f139ca0,,,"Index to Certificates of Freedom, 1823-69",https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/acdd01d0-d700-465c-a183-735c4f139ca0/resource/07fb0a86-e7d6-4023-9033-c6ec50b077d5/download/certificates-of-freedom-1823-69.csv,CSV,"This dataset contains the following attributes: ID, Surname, First Name, Alias, Vessel, Year, No, Date, Record Type, Citation, Remarks [Click here for more information about this index](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/indexes-to-convict-records/index-to-certificates-of-freedom).",2015-10-01T11:59:46.136381,,,Creative Commons Attribution 935,Convict Indexes,NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2015-10-01T01:54:53.522981,2015-10-01T02:14:59.600322,"Between 1788 and 1842 about 80,000 convicts were transported to New South Wales. Of these, about 85% were men and 15% were women. Almost two thirds of convicts were English (along with a small number of Scottish and Welsh), with the Irish making up the remaining one third. Convicts were usually given sentences of transportation for seven, 14 years or life. Some convicts in the 1830s received ten-year sentences. About one quarter of the convicts were sentenced to ‘the term of their natural lives’, and a proportion of these had reprieves from the death sentence. These seven indexes contain around 140,000 entries in total.",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/acdd01d0-d700-465c-a183-735c4f139ca0,,,Index to convict bank accounts 1837-70,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/acdd01d0-d700-465c-a183-735c4f139ca0/resource/4cbdcbe0-e51f-41a1-ae44-25a16c2e06bc/download/bank-accounts-1837-70.csv,CSV,"This dataset contains the following attributes: ID, Surname, First Name, Alias, Vessel, Year, No, Date, Record Type, Citation, Remarks [Click here for more information about this index](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/indexes-to-convict-records/index-to-convict-bank-accounts).",2015-10-01T11:57:07.654001,,,Creative Commons Attribution 934,"Deceased Estate Files, 1880-1923",NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2014-09-30T04:52:48.805972,2016-07-20T12:09:20.785878,"Researching deceased estates files before 1923 is a complex process, with researchers often having to check up to five different indexes to locate a file. This index simplifies the process by combining all indexes into one searchable database. There are currently c.130,000 entries dating from 1880 onwards. [Click here for more information about this index](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/indexes-to-deceased-estates-and-related-records/indexes-to-deceased-estate-files).",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/5d45437c-d07a-4977-95ab-e53fb86f02c1,,,Deceased Estates,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/5d45437c-d07a-4977-95ab-e53fb86f02c1/resource/7ea09383-b884-4458-885a-6fab1fc4c209/download/deceased-estates.csv,CSV,"This dataset contains the following attributes: Surname, First Name, Locality, Date Of Death, Date Duty Paid, Item, Reel, Remarks, ID",2014-09-30T00:55:53.313012,,,Creative Commons Attribution 933,Railway Employment Records,NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2014-09-30T04:34:46.985977,2016-07-20T12:10:21.234999,"This index contains 763 entries from two series of records: a register of salaried officers working for the NSW Government Railways and Tramways, 1856-1890; and a personnel register for Darling Harbour, 1909-32. [Click here for more information about this index](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/professions-and-occupations/railway-employees-1/railway-employment-records).",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/1f776129-6d97-4225-afc0-b9fc1833f815,,,Railway Employment Records,http://data.nsw.gov.au/data/storage/f/2014-09-30T04%3A35%3A07.812Z/railway-employment-records.csv,CSV,"This dataset contains the following attributes: Surname, First Name, First Position Listed, Date of First Position Listed, Page, Item, Remarks, ID",2014-09-30T00:36:18.152909,,,Creative Commons Attribution 932,"Nominal Roll of the First Railway Section (AIF), 1917-20",NSW State Archives,,2014-09-30T04:50:13.606219,2016-07-20T12:15:14.925772,"Name search for railway employees who formed the 1st Railway Section of the Australian Imperial Expeditionary Force, also known as the 6th Australian Broad Gauge Railway Operating Company. This index contains 435 entries and was compiled from one record series by the [State Records NSW Volunteer program](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/about-us/volunteers/volunteers). [Click here for more information about this index](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/professions-and-occupations/railway-employees-1/nominal-roll-aif).",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/7e8b1833-4edc-483f-b38c-816e87a60149,,,Nominal Roll of the First Railway Section (AIF).csv,http://data.nsw.gov.au/data/storage/f/2014-09-30T04%3A50%3A17.994Z/nominal-roll-of-the-first-railway-section-aif.csv,CSV,"This dataset contains the following attributes: Surname, Other Names, Age, Address, Date of Joining, Series, Reel, Page, ID",2014-09-30T00:51:03.642506,,,Creative Commons Attribution 931,"NSW Government Railways and Tramways Roll of Honour, 1914-1919",NSW State Archives,,2014-09-30T04:45:10.718317,2016-07-20T12:15:24.842423,"Name search for railway employees who died in the First World War. This index contains 1214 entries and was compiled from one volume by the [State Records NSW Volunteer program](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/about-us/volunteers/volunteers). [Click here for more information about this index](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/professions-and-occupations/railway-employees-1/railways-and-tramways-roll-of-honour).",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/33809e06-5e9e-49e6-a922-b345afc0b4ca,,,NSW Govt Railways and Tramways - Roll of Honour - 1914-1919.csv,http://data.nsw.gov.au/data/storage/f/2014-09-30T04%3A45%3A19.871Z/nsw-govt-railways-and-tramways-roll-of-honour-1914-1919.csv,CSV,"This dataset contains the following attributes: Surname, First Name, Branch, Military Unit, Page No, ID",2014-09-30T00:46:33.977932,,,Creative Commons Attribution 930,Soldier Settlement Indexes,NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2013-05-28T05:07:29.765962,2019-10-31T03:35:58.068240,"The passage of the Returned Soldiers Settlement Act 1916, (Act No 21 1916) allowed the settlement of returned soldiers on Crown and Closer Settlement lands. When applying for land, an ex-serviceman was required to complete a Qualification Certificate which was a declaration of his or her status as an ex-service person and eligibility for land. These indexes were created by the [State Records NSW Volunteer program](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/about-us/volunteers/volunteers).",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/78fe0108-2ae2-4918-b359-48a3bb1c31dd,,,Returned Soldiers Settlement Loan Files,https://www.records.nsw.gov.au/archives/collections-and-research/guides-and-indexes/node/1521/browse,website link,"For a description of this data, see this page: [Returned Soldiers Settlement Loan Files](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/indexes-to-land-records/returned-soldiers-settlement-loans-files)",2013-05-28T01:12:43.384186,,,Creative Commons Attribution 929,Soldier Settlement Indexes,NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2013-05-28T05:07:29.765962,2019-10-31T03:35:58.068240,"The passage of the Returned Soldiers Settlement Act 1916, (Act No 21 1916) allowed the settlement of returned soldiers on Crown and Closer Settlement lands. When applying for land, an ex-serviceman was required to complete a Qualification Certificate which was a declaration of his or her status as an ex-service person and eligibility for land. These indexes were created by the [State Records NSW Volunteer program](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/about-us/volunteers/volunteers).",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/78fe0108-2ae2-4918-b359-48a3bb1c31dd,,,Returned Soldier Settlement Miscellaneous Files,https://www.records.nsw.gov.au/archives/collections-and-research/guides-and-indexes/node/1511/browse,website link,"For a description of this data, see this page: [Returned Soldier Settlement Miscellaneous Files](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/indexes-to-land-records/index-to-returned-soldiers-miscellaneous-files)",2013-05-28T01:12:01.329735,,,Creative Commons Attribution 928,Soldier Settlement Indexes,NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2013-05-28T05:07:29.765962,2019-10-31T03:35:58.068240,"The passage of the Returned Soldiers Settlement Act 1916, (Act No 21 1916) allowed the settlement of returned soldiers on Crown and Closer Settlement lands. When applying for land, an ex-serviceman was required to complete a Qualification Certificate which was a declaration of his or her status as an ex-service person and eligibility for land. These indexes were created by the [State Records NSW Volunteer program](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/about-us/volunteers/volunteers).",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/78fe0108-2ae2-4918-b359-48a3bb1c31dd,,,"Registers of Settlement Purchase, 1905-1929",https://www.records.nsw.gov.au/archives/collections-and-research/guides-and-indexes/node/1526/browse,website link,"For a description of this data, see this page: [Registers of Settlement Purchase](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/indexes-to-land-records/index-to-registers-of-settlement-purchases)",2013-05-28T01:11:22.607075,,,Creative Commons Attribution 927,Soldier Settlement Indexes,NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2013-05-28T05:07:29.765962,2019-10-31T03:35:58.068240,"The passage of the Returned Soldiers Settlement Act 1916, (Act No 21 1916) allowed the settlement of returned soldiers on Crown and Closer Settlement lands. When applying for land, an ex-serviceman was required to complete a Qualification Certificate which was a declaration of his or her status as an ex-service person and eligibility for land. These indexes were created by the [State Records NSW Volunteer program](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/about-us/volunteers/volunteers).",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/78fe0108-2ae2-4918-b359-48a3bb1c31dd,,,"Closer Settlement and Returned Soldier’s Transfer files, 1907-36, 1951",https://www.records.nsw.gov.au/archives/collections-and-research/guides-and-indexes/node/1546/browse,website link,"For a description of this data, see this page: [Closer Settlement and Returned Soldier’s Transfer files](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/indexes-to-land-records/index-to-returned-soldiers-transfer-files)",2013-05-28T01:10:39.394959,,,Creative Commons Attribution 926,Soldier Settlement Indexes,NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2013-05-28T05:07:29.765962,2019-10-31T03:35:58.068240,"The passage of the Returned Soldiers Settlement Act 1916, (Act No 21 1916) allowed the settlement of returned soldiers on Crown and Closer Settlement lands. When applying for land, an ex-serviceman was required to complete a Qualification Certificate which was a declaration of his or her status as an ex-service person and eligibility for land. These indexes were created by the [State Records NSW Volunteer program](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/about-us/volunteers/volunteers).",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/78fe0108-2ae2-4918-b359-48a3bb1c31dd,,,"Closer Settlement Transfer Registers, Jul 1919 - Apr 1925",https://www.records.nsw.gov.au/archives/collections-and-research/guides-and-indexes/node/1541/browse,website link,"For a description of this data, see this page: [Closer Settlement Transfer Registers](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/indexes-to-land-records/index-to-closer-settlement-transfer-registers).",2013-05-28T01:09:42.446601,,,Creative Commons Attribution 925,Soldier Settlement Indexes,NSW State Archives,State Records Authority,2013-05-28T05:07:29.765962,2019-10-31T03:35:58.068240,"The passage of the Returned Soldiers Settlement Act 1916, (Act No 21 1916) allowed the settlement of returned soldiers on Crown and Closer Settlement lands. When applying for land, an ex-serviceman was required to complete a Qualification Certificate which was a declaration of his or her status as an ex-service person and eligibility for land. These indexes were created by the [State Records NSW Volunteer program](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/about-us/volunteers/volunteers).",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/78fe0108-2ae2-4918-b359-48a3bb1c31dd,,,"Closer Settlement Promotion files, 1913-",https://www.records.nsw.gov.au/archives/collections-and-research/guides-and-indexes/node/1551/browse,website link,"For a description of this data, see: [Closer Settlement Promotion files](http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/state-archives/indexes-online/indexes-to-land-records/index-to-closer-settlement-promotion-files).",2013-05-28T01:08:57.757219,,,Creative Commons Attribution 924,"Albums recently added to SLNSW's Manuscripts, Oral History and Pictures catalogue",State Library of NSW,,2013-05-24T05:31:04.374275,2016-07-20T12:13:56.770980,"Machine readable feed of albums recently added to SLNSW's Manuscripts, Oral History and Pictures catalogue.",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/986cbe9b-1e7a-492d-9f1a-c90cb6b20a0f,,,"Albums recently added to SLNSW's Manuscripts, Oral History and Pictures catalogue",http://feeds.feedburner.com/recentalbumsmohp,RSS,,2013-05-24T01:31:30.334408,2013-05-26T22:20:02.046449,,Creative Commons Attribution 923,State Library of NSW Collection Photostream,State Library of NSW,,2013-05-24T02:10:25.292436,2016-07-20T12:15:53.827269,"View, download and reuse photographs from the State Library of NSW's collections. ",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/b6922426-8725-4f2e-bcf3-d419a49f61ef,,,State Library of NSW Collection Photostream,http://www.flickr.com/photos/statelibraryofnsw/,HTML,,2013-05-23T22:10:39.871133,2013-05-26T22:20:43.989742,20.0,Creative Commons Attribution 922,WW1 Diary and Letter Transcripts,State Library of NSW,State Library of NSW,2016-07-25T22:26:44.309321,2016-07-25T22:26:59.738806,"Approximately 11,000 volumes of letters and diaries of WW1 Australian soldiers have been collected by the Library. For the WWI Centenary Commemoration we have committed to making them accessible to all through digitisation and transcription.",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/4095e38b-785f-4f3c-917f-d041fce0e408,,,WW1 Diary and Letter Transcripts API,http://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/api,API,,2016-07-26T08:26:59.285520,,,Creative Commons Attribution 921,State Library of NSW GitHub,State Library of NSW,State Library of NSW,2016-08-15T06:22:53.062928,2016-08-31T06:48:58.110513,"The State Library uses GitHub, the free collaboration repository, to provide access to our code that has been developed for various Library and digital mobile projects. Contributions to the State Library of NSW GitHub account includes code for apps, games and other media-based assets.",data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/d6bf9721-5489-4b74-982d-6864988fe99c,,,State Library of NSW's GitHub account,https://raw.githubusercontent.com/slnsw-webdev,"CSS, Java, PHP, JavaScript","The State Library uses GitHub, the free collaborative repository, to provide access to our code that has been developed for various Library digital and mobile projects. Contributions to the State Library of NSW’s GitHub account includes code for apps, games and other media-based assets.",2016-08-15T16:24:59.271171,,,Creative Commons Attribution 920,Collection of the State Library of NSW,State Library of NSW,,2013-05-24T05:32:35.564263,2022-01-17T05:44:46.859872,Link to the collection of the State Library of NSW.,data.nsw.gov.au,https://data.nsw.gov.au/data/dataset/dd806ef6-e316-410e-bf5c-540311947d5a,,,Collection of the State Library of New South Wales,https://collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/,website link,,2013-05-24T01:33:05.246041,2013-05-26T22:20:01.424877,,Creative Commons Attribution 917,South Australian Museum Terrestrial Invertebrate Collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2013-03-21T05:57:20.220041,2016-07-05T03:45:43.422359,"The collection has Australia-wide and Indo-Pacific representation, plus some world specimens for comparative purposes. The collection comprises 1200000 pinned specimens, 450000 specimens in spirit and 20000 slides. There are 8670 holotypes, of which 5000 are from the A.M. Lea beetle collection. There are 23000 other types. In summary, the entomological collections Class Insecta comprise 662 Australian families and 85,961 known Australian species. The arachnological collections comprise spiders (50000 specimens in alcohol), mites (25000 slide mounts and 20000 specimens in alcohol), scorpions (5000 specimens in alcohol) and myriapods. Images from this collection are available on the Atlas of Living Australia. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. The ALA also has a fully documented [API](http://api.ala.org.au/) Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a81870be-82eb-4868-81e9-0a8d11622675,1860-2014,,Type Specimen images from the South Australian Museum Terrestrial Invertebrates collection,https://biocache.ala.org.au/occurrence/search?q=data_resource_uid:dr742,,"The South Australian Museum has been photographing the Type specimens in the Terrestrial Invertebrates collection. These images, of over 3500 specimens, can be accessed on the Atlas of Living Australia.",2016-06-28T11:25:21.631431,,,Creative Commons Attribution 916,South Australian Museum Terrestrial Invertebrate Collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2013-03-21T05:57:20.220041,2016-07-05T03:45:43.422359,"The collection has Australia-wide and Indo-Pacific representation, plus some world specimens for comparative purposes. The collection comprises 1200000 pinned specimens, 450000 specimens in spirit and 20000 slides. There are 8670 holotypes, of which 5000 are from the A.M. Lea beetle collection. There are 23000 other types. In summary, the entomological collections Class Insecta comprise 662 Australian families and 85,961 known Australian species. The arachnological collections comprise spiders (50000 specimens in alcohol), mites (25000 slide mounts and 20000 specimens in alcohol), scorpions (5000 specimens in alcohol) and myriapods. Images from this collection are available on the Atlas of Living Australia. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. The ALA also has a fully documented [API](http://api.ala.org.au/) Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a81870be-82eb-4868-81e9-0a8d11622675,1860-2014,,Information about terrestrial invertebrates at the South Australian Museum,https://www.samuseum.sa.gov.au/collections/biological-sciences/terrestrial-invertebrates,HTML,Information about terrestrial invertebrates at the South Australian Museum.,2014-06-04T08:21:41.870868,2014-06-04T09:00:29.267363,9619.0,Creative Commons Attribution 915,South Australian Museum Terrestrial Invertebrate Collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2013-03-21T05:57:20.220041,2016-07-05T03:45:43.422359,"The collection has Australia-wide and Indo-Pacific representation, plus some world specimens for comparative purposes. The collection comprises 1200000 pinned specimens, 450000 specimens in spirit and 20000 slides. There are 8670 holotypes, of which 5000 are from the A.M. Lea beetle collection. There are 23000 other types. In summary, the entomological collections Class Insecta comprise 662 Australian families and 85,961 known Australian species. The arachnological collections comprise spiders (50000 specimens in alcohol), mites (25000 slide mounts and 20000 specimens in alcohol), scorpions (5000 specimens in alcohol) and myriapods. Images from this collection are available on the Atlas of Living Australia. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. The ALA also has a fully documented [API](http://api.ala.org.au/) Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a81870be-82eb-4868-81e9-0a8d11622675,1860-2014,,Field definitions,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a81870be-82eb-4868-81e9-0a8d11622675/resource/f4f44b17-d081-4ec4-81d4-6da8c51bb98c/download/field-definitions-ala-sourced-data.csv,CSV,Field Definitions - Atlas of Living Australia datasets,2013-05-23T20:48:07.948833,2016-06-24T04:09:09.146071,19397.0,Creative Commons Attribution 914,South Australian Museum Terrestrial Invertebrate Collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2013-03-21T05:57:20.220041,2016-07-05T03:45:43.422359,"The collection has Australia-wide and Indo-Pacific representation, plus some world specimens for comparative purposes. The collection comprises 1200000 pinned specimens, 450000 specimens in spirit and 20000 slides. There are 8670 holotypes, of which 5000 are from the A.M. Lea beetle collection. There are 23000 other types. In summary, the entomological collections Class Insecta comprise 662 Australian families and 85,961 known Australian species. The arachnological collections comprise spiders (50000 specimens in alcohol), mites (25000 slide mounts and 20000 specimens in alcohol), scorpions (5000 specimens in alcohol) and myriapods. Images from this collection are available on the Atlas of Living Australia. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. The ALA also has a fully documented [API](http://api.ala.org.au/) Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a81870be-82eb-4868-81e9-0a8d11622675,1860-2014,,Metadata tempate- Terrestrial Invertebrates.doc,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/storage/f/2013-05-15T02%3A28%3A55.505Z/metadata-tempate-terrestrial-invertebrates.doc,DOC,Contains high level metadata information of the Terrestrial Invertebrates dataset.,2013-05-14T21:03:23.389242,2014-10-30T09:01:23,852480.0,Creative Commons Attribution 913,South Australian Museum Terrestrial Invertebrate Collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2013-03-21T05:57:20.220041,2016-07-05T03:45:43.422359,"The collection has Australia-wide and Indo-Pacific representation, plus some world specimens for comparative purposes. The collection comprises 1200000 pinned specimens, 450000 specimens in spirit and 20000 slides. There are 8670 holotypes, of which 5000 are from the A.M. Lea beetle collection. There are 23000 other types. In summary, the entomological collections Class Insecta comprise 662 Australian families and 85,961 known Australian species. The arachnological collections comprise spiders (50000 specimens in alcohol), mites (25000 slide mounts and 20000 specimens in alcohol), scorpions (5000 specimens in alcohol) and myriapods. Images from this collection are available on the Atlas of Living Australia. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. The ALA also has a fully documented [API](http://api.ala.org.au/) Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a81870be-82eb-4868-81e9-0a8d11622675,1860-2014,,South Australian Museum Terrestrial Invertebrate Collection,https://collections.ala.org.au/public/show/co56,HTML,"The collection has Australia-wide and Indo-Pacific representation, plus some world specimens for comparative purposes. The collection comprises 1200000 pinned specimens, 450000 specimens in spirit and 20000 slides. There are 8670 holotypes, of which 5000 are from the A.M. Lea beetle collection. There are 23000 other types. In summary, the entomological collections Class Insecta comprise 662 Australian families and 85,961 known Australian species. ",2013-03-21T05:58:09.709614,2013-04-09T13:48:30.513485,32768.0,Creative Commons Attribution 909,South Australian Museum Marine Invertebrates collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2016-07-05T03:33:27.070432,2017-05-08T02:34:29.724267,"The Marine invertebrates collection is currently represented by 23 phyla and holds more than one million specimen lots including 1,700 holotypes, 11,300 secondary types, 33,000 registered lots and 1,400 microscope slide preparations. Specimens include molluscs, crustaceans, worms, sponges, jellyfish, corals and sea anemones, sea stars and sea urchins. Of these specimens about 5,500 have been databased and are accessible through the Atlas of Living Australia, more than 1500 of them with digital images of the specimen and label. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. The ALA also has a fully documented [API](http://api.ala.org.au/) The Museum has also been using the ALA's Online Volunteer Digitisation Portal, [DIGIVOL](https://volunteer.ala.org.au/) to digitise the data for Marine Invertebrate specimens. To facilitate this a large quantity of specimens have been imaged. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c82dc4f6-85d7-4999-b5d5-6eeb97dfef85,1880-01-01,2016-01-01,Specimen images from the South Australian Museum Marine Invertebrates collection,https://biocache.ala.org.au/occurrences/search?q=collection_uid%3Aco165&fq=multimedia%3A%22Image%22#tab_recordImages,HTML,The records from the South Australian Museum Marine Invertebrates collection which are accompanied by images.,2016-07-05T13:35:25.650675,,,Creative Commons Attribution 908,South Australian Museum Marine Invertebrates collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2016-07-05T03:33:27.070432,2017-05-08T02:34:29.724267,"The Marine invertebrates collection is currently represented by 23 phyla and holds more than one million specimen lots including 1,700 holotypes, 11,300 secondary types, 33,000 registered lots and 1,400 microscope slide preparations. Specimens include molluscs, crustaceans, worms, sponges, jellyfish, corals and sea anemones, sea stars and sea urchins. Of these specimens about 5,500 have been databased and are accessible through the Atlas of Living Australia, more than 1500 of them with digital images of the specimen and label. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. The ALA also has a fully documented [API](http://api.ala.org.au/) The Museum has also been using the ALA's Online Volunteer Digitisation Portal, [DIGIVOL](https://volunteer.ala.org.au/) to digitise the data for Marine Invertebrate specimens. To facilitate this a large quantity of specimens have been imaged. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c82dc4f6-85d7-4999-b5d5-6eeb97dfef85,1880-01-01,2016-01-01,South Australian Museum Marine Invertebrates Collection,https://biocache.ala.org.au/occurrences/search?q=collection_uid:co165,HTML,The South Australian Museum Marine Invertebrates Collection data available through the Atlas of Living Australia,2016-07-05T13:34:15.892177,,,Creative Commons Attribution 907,South Australian Museum - Fraud,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:00:51.826093,2019-12-09T01:07:21.373770,Data detailing fraud detected at the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e50f5de4-1568-4bf9-880a-b481edfc9231,,,Fraud - 2013-14,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e50f5de4-1568-4bf9-880a-b481edfc9231/resource/20fc7862-ee78-43cf-b434-2bb64ec721a5/download/2013-14-fraud.csv,CSV,Fraud data from 2013-14 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:25:02.864610,2019-09-04T04:25:02.797084,,Creative Commons Attribution 906,South Australian Museum - Fraud,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:00:51.826093,2019-12-09T01:07:21.373770,Data detailing fraud detected at the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e50f5de4-1568-4bf9-880a-b481edfc9231,,,Fraud - 2014-15,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e50f5de4-1568-4bf9-880a-b481edfc9231/resource/9411ff83-9410-48ed-97d8-dbe0a0338518/download/2014-15-fraud.csv,CSV,Fraud data from 2014-15 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:24:25.334175,2019-09-04T04:24:25.289244,,Creative Commons Attribution 905,South Australian Museum - Fraud,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:00:51.826093,2019-12-09T01:07:21.373770,Data detailing fraud detected at the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e50f5de4-1568-4bf9-880a-b481edfc9231,,,Fraud - 2015-16,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e50f5de4-1568-4bf9-880a-b481edfc9231/resource/0c566d20-b869-4a1d-9fdd-14f07067f96c/download/2015-16-fraud.csv,CSV,Fraud data from 2015-16 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:23:49.248313,2019-09-04T04:23:49.180734,,Creative Commons Attribution 904,South Australian Museum - Fraud,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:00:51.826093,2019-12-09T01:07:21.373770,Data detailing fraud detected at the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e50f5de4-1568-4bf9-880a-b481edfc9231,,,Fraud - 2016-17,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e50f5de4-1568-4bf9-880a-b481edfc9231/resource/ce102f86-6098-42fd-afca-c7510d20bd21/download/2016-17-fraud.csv,CSV,Fraud data from 2016-17 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:23:11.555572,2019-09-04T04:23:11.496419,,Creative Commons Attribution 903,South Australian Museum - Fraud,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:00:51.826093,2019-12-09T01:07:21.373770,Data detailing fraud detected at the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e50f5de4-1568-4bf9-880a-b481edfc9231,,,Fraud - 2017-18,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e50f5de4-1568-4bf9-880a-b481edfc9231/resource/470ec3ea-9bd1-4192-b15e-993a61fea4bd/download/south-australian-museum_fraud_2017-18.csv,CSV,Data regarding instances of fraud for 2017-18.,2019-08-15T04:01:18.561705,2019-08-15T04:01:18.509959,,Creative Commons Attribution 902,South Australian Museum - Fraud,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:00:51.826093,2019-12-09T01:07:21.373770,Data detailing fraud detected at the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e50f5de4-1568-4bf9-880a-b481edfc9231,,,Fraud - 2018-19,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e50f5de4-1568-4bf9-880a-b481edfc9231/resource/13fbe0bd-6663-4d36-a54c-7c20c756a152/download/2018-19-fraud.csv,CSV,Fraud data from 2018-19 Annual Report,2019-09-04T23:48:11.199165,2019-09-04T23:48:11.146340,,Creative Commons Attribution 901,South Australian Museum - Work Health and Safety,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T02:02:11.516432,2019-12-09T01:07:54.505235,"Data detailing workplace injury claims, work health and safety regulations and return to work costs for the South Australian Museum",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/779c678d-6dc6-4ae4-b25a-ea5bf39c9a2b,,,Workplace Health and Safety - 2013-14,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/779c678d-6dc6-4ae4-b25a-ea5bf39c9a2b/resource/0395866a-a30d-47af-8f18-5093efd19844/download/2013-14-whs.csv,CSV,Workplace Health and Safety data from 2013-14 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:39:05.788999,2019-09-04T04:39:05.738395,,Creative Commons Attribution 900,South Australian Museum - Work Health and Safety,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T02:02:11.516432,2019-12-09T01:07:54.505235,"Data detailing workplace injury claims, work health and safety regulations and return to work costs for the South Australian Museum",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/779c678d-6dc6-4ae4-b25a-ea5bf39c9a2b,,,Workplace Health and Safety - 2014-15,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/779c678d-6dc6-4ae4-b25a-ea5bf39c9a2b/resource/82a59b6e-cb4e-42d7-a3e5-f74dc463f8e6/download/2014-15-whs.csv,CSV,Workplace Health and Safety data from 2014-15 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:38:18.193067,2019-09-04T04:38:18.144963,,Creative Commons Attribution 899,South Australian Museum - Work Health and Safety,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T02:02:11.516432,2019-12-09T01:07:54.505235,"Data detailing workplace injury claims, work health and safety regulations and return to work costs for the South Australian Museum",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/779c678d-6dc6-4ae4-b25a-ea5bf39c9a2b,,,Workplace Health and Safety (Injuries) - 2015-16,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/779c678d-6dc6-4ae4-b25a-ea5bf39c9a2b/resource/173c13f1-3108-4327-828c-03cf1933d6dd/download/2015-16-whs-injuries.csv,CSV,Workplace Health and Safety (Injuries) data from 2015-16 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:37:34.631468,2019-09-05T00:10:45.255593,,Creative Commons Attribution 898,South Australian Museum - Work Health and Safety,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T02:02:11.516432,2019-12-09T01:07:54.505235,"Data detailing workplace injury claims, work health and safety regulations and return to work costs for the South Australian Museum",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/779c678d-6dc6-4ae4-b25a-ea5bf39c9a2b,,,Workplace Health and Safety (Workers Compensation) - 2015-16,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/779c678d-6dc6-4ae4-b25a-ea5bf39c9a2b/resource/1417008e-25c6-4807-ac28-707411ac6048/download/2015-16-whs-workers-comp.csv,CSV,Workplace Health and Safety (Workers Compensation) data from 2015-16 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:35:39.186891,2019-09-04T04:35:39.119550,,Creative Commons Attribution 897,South Australian Museum - Work Health and Safety,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T02:02:11.516432,2019-12-09T01:07:54.505235,"Data detailing workplace injury claims, work health and safety regulations and return to work costs for the South Australian Museum",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/779c678d-6dc6-4ae4-b25a-ea5bf39c9a2b,,,Workplace Health and Safety - 2017-18,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/779c678d-6dc6-4ae4-b25a-ea5bf39c9a2b/resource/ad7475a2-515c-42e8-a913-51b9681da769/download/south-australian-museum_work-health-and-safety-and-return-to-work-performance_2017-18.csv,CSV,Data regarding Work Health and Safety and Return to Work Performance for 2017-18.,2019-08-15T03:48:19.066304,2019-08-15T03:48:19.010996,,Creative Commons Attribution 896,South Australian Museum - Work Health and Safety,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T02:02:11.516432,2019-12-09T01:07:54.505235,"Data detailing workplace injury claims, work health and safety regulations and return to work costs for the South Australian Museum",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/779c678d-6dc6-4ae4-b25a-ea5bf39c9a2b,,,Workplace Health and Safety (Workers Compensation) - 2018-19,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/779c678d-6dc6-4ae4-b25a-ea5bf39c9a2b/resource/8509ea49-d3cd-4a1d-bb59-e12211b61836/download/2018-19-whs-workers-compensation.csv,CSV,Workplace Health and Safety (Workers Compensation) data from 2018-19 Annual Report,2019-09-05T00:08:29.240565,2019-09-05T00:08:29.188469,,Creative Commons Attribution 895,South Australian Museum - Work Health and Safety,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T02:02:11.516432,2019-12-09T01:07:54.505235,"Data detailing workplace injury claims, work health and safety regulations and return to work costs for the South Australian Museum",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/779c678d-6dc6-4ae4-b25a-ea5bf39c9a2b,,,Workplace Health and Safety - 2018-19,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/779c678d-6dc6-4ae4-b25a-ea5bf39c9a2b/resource/63b0efba-4015-44ab-a179-7d56d0af0dc2/download/2018-19-whs.csv,CSV,Workplace Health and Safety data from 2018-19 Annual Report,2019-09-05T00:07:24.041894,2019-09-05T00:07:23.987951,,Creative Commons Attribution 894,South Australian Museum - Whistle Blowers,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:02:36.377113,2019-12-09T01:08:18.617465,Data detailing whistle blowers for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/ad435283-7254-4467-b4bc-0afa4fc54b1f,,,Whistle Blowers - 2013-14,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/ad435283-7254-4467-b4bc-0afa4fc54b1f/resource/bc89f1f8-d762-45cb-b6a5-bc9861c85a31/download/2013-14-whistle-blowers.csv,CSV,Whistle Blowers data from 2013-14 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:22:03.593544,2019-09-04T04:22:03.518510,,Creative Commons Attribution 893,South Australian Museum - Whistle Blowers,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:02:36.377113,2019-12-09T01:08:18.617465,Data detailing whistle blowers for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/ad435283-7254-4467-b4bc-0afa4fc54b1f,,,Whistle Blowers - 2014-15,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/ad435283-7254-4467-b4bc-0afa4fc54b1f/resource/934f66cb-d4ad-4fa9-b345-0b2a6d698982/download/2014-15-whistle-blowers.csv,CSV,Whistle Blowers data from 2014-15 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:21:18.705174,2019-09-04T04:21:18.630661,,Creative Commons Attribution 892,South Australian Museum - Whistle Blowers,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:02:36.377113,2019-12-09T01:08:18.617465,Data detailing whistle blowers for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/ad435283-7254-4467-b4bc-0afa4fc54b1f,,,Whistle Blowers - 2015-16,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/ad435283-7254-4467-b4bc-0afa4fc54b1f/resource/33e04ca7-3509-40de-b3c6-44dc92b2d81b/download/2015-16-whistle-blowers.csv,CSV,Whistle Blowers data from 2015-16 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:20:37.102007,2019-09-04T04:20:37.057670,,Creative Commons Attribution 891,South Australian Museum - Whistle Blowers,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:02:36.377113,2019-12-09T01:08:18.617465,Data detailing whistle blowers for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/ad435283-7254-4467-b4bc-0afa4fc54b1f,,,Whistle Blowers - 2016-17,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/ad435283-7254-4467-b4bc-0afa4fc54b1f/resource/3576e95f-c5f3-4ac7-b8a5-b517cae37c91/download/2016-17-whistle-blowers.csv,CSV,Whistle Blowers data from 2016-17 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:19:57.696860,2019-09-04T04:19:57.630354,,Creative Commons Attribution 890,South Australian Museum - Whistle Blowers,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:02:36.377113,2019-12-09T01:08:18.617465,Data detailing whistle blowers for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/ad435283-7254-4467-b4bc-0afa4fc54b1f,,,Whistle Blowers - 2017-18,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/ad435283-7254-4467-b4bc-0afa4fc54b1f/resource/09ede3c5-85f0-450f-831a-109dc2ae378b/download/south-australian-museum_whistle-blowers_2017-18.csv,CSV,Data regarding whistle blowers for 2017-18.,2019-08-15T04:03:02.133735,2019-08-15T04:03:02.078403,,Creative Commons Attribution 889,South Australian Museum - Whistle Blowers,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:02:36.377113,2019-12-09T01:08:18.617465,Data detailing whistle blowers for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/ad435283-7254-4467-b4bc-0afa4fc54b1f,,,Whistle Blowers - 2018-19,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/ad435283-7254-4467-b4bc-0afa4fc54b1f/resource/3967db76-7d60-44dc-a896-a9200184d853/download/2018-19-whistle-blowers.csv,CSV,Whistle Blowers data from 2018-19 Annual Report,2019-09-04T23:50:44.326883,2019-09-04T23:50:44.259824,,Creative Commons Attribution 888,South Australian Museum - Executive Employment,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:53:56.674169,2019-12-09T01:08:44.186137,Data detailing executive employment at the South Australian Museum.,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/1acd777b-4877-452f-ac3a-36e3ef8d404c,,,Executive Employment - 2013-14,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/1acd777b-4877-452f-ac3a-36e3ef8d404c/resource/c44ecc60-659d-43c6-a9fe-8120b86501e9/download/2013-14-executives.csv,CSV,Executive Employment data from 2013-14 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:34:02.328217,2019-09-04T04:34:02.255162,,Creative Commons Attribution 887,South Australian Museum - Executive Employment,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:53:56.674169,2019-12-09T01:08:44.186137,Data detailing executive employment at the South Australian Museum.,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/1acd777b-4877-452f-ac3a-36e3ef8d404c,,,Executive Employment - 2014-15,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/1acd777b-4877-452f-ac3a-36e3ef8d404c/resource/5be643b0-b40e-4bb8-aa83-595fba003615/download/2014-15-executives.csv,CSV,Executive Employment data from 2014-15 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:33:27.848636,2019-09-04T04:33:27.800232,,Creative Commons Attribution 886,South Australian Museum - Executive Employment,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:53:56.674169,2019-12-09T01:08:44.186137,Data detailing executive employment at the South Australian Museum.,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/1acd777b-4877-452f-ac3a-36e3ef8d404c,,,Executive Employment - 2015-16,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/1acd777b-4877-452f-ac3a-36e3ef8d404c/resource/c0b9c64f-f8b5-4e56-8376-1822ee396982/download/2015-16-executives.csv,CSV,Executive Employment data from 2015-16 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:32:56.480809,2019-09-04T04:32:56.429536,,Creative Commons Attribution 885,South Australian Museum - Executive Employment,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:53:56.674169,2019-12-09T01:08:44.186137,Data detailing executive employment at the South Australian Museum.,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/1acd777b-4877-452f-ac3a-36e3ef8d404c,,,Executive Employment - 2016-17,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/1acd777b-4877-452f-ac3a-36e3ef8d404c/resource/cb59cc00-3d2a-4a64-b034-5b225effdeb2/download/2016-17-executives.csv,CSV,Executive Employment data from 2016-17 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:32:27.127445,2019-09-04T04:32:27.062435,,Creative Commons Attribution 884,South Australian Museum - Executive Employment,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:53:56.674169,2019-12-09T01:08:44.186137,Data detailing executive employment at the South Australian Museum.,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/1acd777b-4877-452f-ac3a-36e3ef8d404c,,,Executive Employment - 2017-18,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/1acd777b-4877-452f-ac3a-36e3ef8d404c/resource/6900330b-21b1-4f08-b370-2de303d53b8b/download/south-australian-museum_executive-employment-in-the-agency_2017-18.csv,CSV,Data regarding Executive Employment for 2017-18.,2019-08-15T03:54:34.903947,2019-08-15T03:54:34.859781,,Creative Commons Attribution 883,South Australian Museum - Executive Employment,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:53:56.674169,2019-12-09T01:08:44.186137,Data detailing executive employment at the South Australian Museum.,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/1acd777b-4877-452f-ac3a-36e3ef8d404c,,,Executive Employment - 2018-19,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/1acd777b-4877-452f-ac3a-36e3ef8d404c/resource/85809f7d-3ffc-4bfd-aacc-b1ad63a2718a/download/2018-19-executives.csv,CSV,Executive Employment data from 2018-19 Annual Report,2019-09-04T23:46:00.607610,2019-09-04T23:46:00.534359,,Creative Commons Attribution 882,South Australian Museum - Contractors,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:58:27.191500,2019-12-09T01:09:06.088144,Data detailing contractors for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/93b403e1-2660-4678-ad59-225f9c06081b,,,Contractors - 2013-14,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/93b403e1-2660-4678-ad59-225f9c06081b/resource/ac7a1df2-e5bc-4858-ba9c-b0e6cd3cf162/download/2013-14-contractors.csv,CSV,Contractors data from 2013-14 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:28:01.372509,2019-09-04T04:28:01.300110,,Creative Commons Attribution 881,South Australian Museum - Contractors,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:58:27.191500,2019-12-09T01:09:06.088144,Data detailing contractors for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/93b403e1-2660-4678-ad59-225f9c06081b,,,Contractors - 2014-15,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/93b403e1-2660-4678-ad59-225f9c06081b/resource/0298a2c0-0f91-4513-aa4b-5dfe97177abb/download/2014-15-contractors.csv,CSV,Contractors data from 2014-15 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:27:22.235852,2019-09-04T04:27:22.156934,,Creative Commons Attribution 880,South Australian Museum - Contractors,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:58:27.191500,2019-12-09T01:09:06.088144,Data detailing contractors for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/93b403e1-2660-4678-ad59-225f9c06081b,,,Contractors - 2015-16,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/93b403e1-2660-4678-ad59-225f9c06081b/resource/939306e3-4d84-432a-a9f2-2659b1bde202/download/2015-16-contractors.csv,CSV,Contractors data from 2015-16 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:26:43.223202,2019-09-04T04:26:43.156338,,Creative Commons Attribution 879,South Australian Museum - Contractors,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:58:27.191500,2019-12-09T01:09:06.088144,Data detailing contractors for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/93b403e1-2660-4678-ad59-225f9c06081b,,,Contractors - 2016-17,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/93b403e1-2660-4678-ad59-225f9c06081b/resource/3cfed485-8160-4aec-9abd-905bcc2eda64/download/2016-17-contractors.csv,CSV,Contractors data from 2016-17 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:26:01.108966,2019-09-04T04:26:01.060874,,Creative Commons Attribution 878,South Australian Museum - Contractors,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:58:27.191500,2019-12-09T01:09:06.088144,Data detailing contractors for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/93b403e1-2660-4678-ad59-225f9c06081b,,,Contractors - 2017-18,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/93b403e1-2660-4678-ad59-225f9c06081b/resource/3e548f01-f2bf-4110-b061-595b0d8545cf/download/south-australian-museum_contractors_2017-18.csv,CSV,Data regarding contractors for 2017-18.,2019-08-15T03:59:09.056241,2019-08-15T03:59:09.004337,,Creative Commons Attribution 877,South Australian Museum - Contractors,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:58:27.191500,2019-12-09T01:09:06.088144,Data detailing contractors for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/93b403e1-2660-4678-ad59-225f9c06081b,,,Contractors - 2018-19,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/93b403e1-2660-4678-ad59-225f9c06081b/resource/2cbf09d0-f358-485c-aaa7-e6551a596eae/download/2018-19-contractors.csv,CSV,Contractors data from 2018-19 Annual Report,2019-09-04T23:42:35.167567,2019-09-04T23:42:35.100491,,Creative Commons Attribution 876,South Australian Museum - Consultants,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:56:41.725035,2019-12-09T01:09:25.753421,Data regarding consultants for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c0217995-614f-4724-849a-3d5f032da0dd,,,Consultants - 2013-14,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c0217995-614f-4724-849a-3d5f032da0dd/resource/dfa2d2a2-85e6-4dec-a1cf-66843d278c65/download/2013-14-consultants.csv,CSV,Consultants data from 2013-14 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:31:24.342931,2019-09-04T04:31:24.294353,,Creative Commons Attribution 875,South Australian Museum - Consultants,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:56:41.725035,2019-12-09T01:09:25.753421,Data regarding consultants for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c0217995-614f-4724-849a-3d5f032da0dd,,,Consultants - 2014-15,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c0217995-614f-4724-849a-3d5f032da0dd/resource/5d841545-6241-4a26-ba75-3fb2cc6e8515/download/2014-15-consultants.csv,CSV,Consultants data from 2014-15 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:30:52.002997,2019-09-04T04:30:51.954220,,Creative Commons Attribution 874,South Australian Museum - Consultants,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:56:41.725035,2019-12-09T01:09:25.753421,Data regarding consultants for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c0217995-614f-4724-849a-3d5f032da0dd,,,Consultants - 2015-16,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c0217995-614f-4724-849a-3d5f032da0dd/resource/99ead73b-d1e6-4c6e-a010-dbb7eb74d4a8/download/2015-16-consultants.csv,CSV,Consultants data from 2015-16 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:29:59.787875,2019-09-04T04:29:59.743965,,Creative Commons Attribution 873,South Australian Museum - Consultants,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:56:41.725035,2019-12-09T01:09:25.753421,Data regarding consultants for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c0217995-614f-4724-849a-3d5f032da0dd,,,Consultants - 2016-17,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c0217995-614f-4724-849a-3d5f032da0dd/resource/4d99a8c0-19b0-4a37-a856-7514273d3240/download/2016-17-consultants.csv,CSV,Consultants data from 2016-17 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:29:16.674702,2019-09-04T04:29:16.628739,,Creative Commons Attribution 872,South Australian Museum - Consultants,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:56:41.725035,2019-12-09T01:09:25.753421,Data regarding consultants for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c0217995-614f-4724-849a-3d5f032da0dd,,,Consultants - 2017-18,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c0217995-614f-4724-849a-3d5f032da0dd/resource/bd0706c6-5c53-4484-9fdf-a172fd0d1bd9/download/south-australian-museum_consultants_2017-18.csv,CSV,Data regarding consultants for 2017-18.,2019-08-15T03:57:12.167061,2019-08-15T03:57:12.130205,,Creative Commons Attribution 871,South Australian Museum - Consultants,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T03:56:41.725035,2019-12-09T01:09:25.753421,Data regarding consultants for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c0217995-614f-4724-849a-3d5f032da0dd,,,Consultants - 2018-19,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c0217995-614f-4724-849a-3d5f032da0dd/resource/d1bf3695-13bb-440c-8749-ead505e808af/download/2018-19-consultants.csv,CSV,Consultants data from 2018-19 Annual Report,2019-09-04T23:38:26.634663,2019-09-04T23:38:26.585714,,Creative Commons Attribution 870,South Australian Museum - Complaints,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:04:04.497286,2019-12-15T23:58:26.137371,Data detailing complaints for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c39fe206-a5b4-4df5-805e-7095aaf6d04e,,,Complaints - 2014-15,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c39fe206-a5b4-4df5-805e-7095aaf6d04e/resource/1774895d-6589-4571-88e0-b3a2dc0eea90/download/2014-15-complaints.csv,CSV,Complaints data from 2014-15 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:14:04.171986,2019-09-04T04:14:04.108871,,Creative Commons Attribution 869,South Australian Museum - Complaints,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:04:04.497286,2019-12-15T23:58:26.137371,Data detailing complaints for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c39fe206-a5b4-4df5-805e-7095aaf6d04e,,,Complaints - 2015-16,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c39fe206-a5b4-4df5-805e-7095aaf6d04e/resource/10f2d0da-debc-473b-b613-5fa6e17a9eee/download/2015-16-complaints.csv,CSV,Complaints data from 2015-16 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:16:19.128276,2019-09-04T04:16:19.031655,,Creative Commons Attribution 868,South Australian Museum - Complaints,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:04:04.497286,2019-12-15T23:58:26.137371,Data detailing complaints for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c39fe206-a5b4-4df5-805e-7095aaf6d04e,,,Complaints - 2016-17,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c39fe206-a5b4-4df5-805e-7095aaf6d04e/resource/a0fd9bd2-5c37-4419-8ec9-975110b96179/download/2016-17-complaints.csv,CSV,Complaints data from 2016-17 Annual Report,2019-09-04T04:18:05.816378,2019-09-04T04:18:05.770575,,Creative Commons Attribution 867,South Australian Museum - Complaints,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:04:04.497286,2019-12-15T23:58:26.137371,Data detailing complaints for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c39fe206-a5b4-4df5-805e-7095aaf6d04e,,,Complaints - 2017-18,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c39fe206-a5b4-4df5-805e-7095aaf6d04e/resource/0bea76d3-4393-4652-ba31-f02ad7f912ba/download/south-australian-museum_complaints_2017-18.csv,CSV,Data regarding complaints for 2017-18.,2019-08-15T04:04:32.157485,2019-08-15T04:04:32.119917,,Creative Commons Attribution 866,South Australian Museum - Complaints,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2019-08-15T04:04:04.497286,2019-12-15T23:58:26.137371,Data detailing complaints for the South Australian Museum. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c39fe206-a5b4-4df5-805e-7095aaf6d04e,,,Complaints - 2018-19,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c39fe206-a5b4-4df5-805e-7095aaf6d04e/resource/ca0e43ac-ec66-49ef-94c2-c5fd79559ae0/download/2018-19-complaints.csv,CSV,Complaints data from 2018-18 Annual Report,2019-09-04T23:32:04.277036,2019-09-04T23:32:28.358032,,Creative Commons Attribution 865,South Australian Museum Arachnology Collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2016-06-24T05:00:45.749753,2020-02-18T01:13:20.998657,"The Arachnology Collection at the South Australian Museum contains around 300,000 arachnids as well as many centipedes and millipedes (Myriapoda). Of these around 56,000 have been databased. Spider specimens make up the largest component, with some 200,000 specimens stored in alcohol. The Sparassidae (huntsman spiders) are particularly well represented in the collection with over 2000 Australasian specimens. The collection also houses a significant mite (Acarina) collection (about 45,000 specimens) in alcohol or on glass microscope slides, approximately 5000 scorpion (Scorpiones) specimens and a smaller number of Myriapoda specimens (about 3600). The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. The ALA also has a fully documented [API](http://api.ala.org.au/) Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/6812c858-5ff1-4188-9997-befffbc42dbe,1880-01-01,2016-01-01,South Australian Museum Arachnology collection on the Atlas of Living Australia,https://collections.ala.org.au/public/show/co202,Mixed Formats,"The Atlas of Living Australia page for the South Australian Museum Arachnology collection. As an alternative to downloading the entire dataset the ALA also provides [an API](http://api.ala.org.au/)",2016-06-24T15:02:39.155583,,,Creative Commons Attribution 864,South Australian Museum Herpetology Collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2013-03-21T05:07:17.288715,2020-02-18T01:28:14.693870,"Over 70,000 specimens have been registered in this collection, which has a particular emphasis on South Australian and arid zone fauna. A second major regional focus is Melanesia, especially the island of New Guinea (Papua New Guinea and Papua Province, Indonesia), with some 6,000 registered specimens. Most material is formalin-fixed and stored in 70% alcohol, with tadpoles stored in formalin. There is a significant dry skeletal collection of over 1,500 specimens, mostly skulls, and this will continue to be expanded. Since 1980, the great majority of specimens acquired (approx. 40,000) have had tissue samples (mostly liver) taken for genetic and biochemical research. These are held in the S.A. Museum's Australian Biological Tissue Collection. All specimens are individually registered and the data entered on a collections management system. All specimens are stored on-site in the S.A. Museum Science Centre alcohol storage facilities. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. The ALA also has a fully documented [API](http://api.ala.org.au/) Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e0cc2850-5096-44ec-9602-7b5abfaa2094,1880-2014,,Information about herpetology at the South Australian Museum,https://www.samuseum.sa.gov.au/collections/biological-sciences/reptiles-amphibians,HTML,Information about herpetology at the South Australian Museum,2014-06-04T08:44:13.780750,2014-06-04T09:00:21.690925,9109.0,Creative Commons Attribution 863,South Australian Museum Herpetology Collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2013-03-21T05:07:17.288715,2020-02-18T01:28:14.693870,"Over 70,000 specimens have been registered in this collection, which has a particular emphasis on South Australian and arid zone fauna. A second major regional focus is Melanesia, especially the island of New Guinea (Papua New Guinea and Papua Province, Indonesia), with some 6,000 registered specimens. Most material is formalin-fixed and stored in 70% alcohol, with tadpoles stored in formalin. There is a significant dry skeletal collection of over 1,500 specimens, mostly skulls, and this will continue to be expanded. Since 1980, the great majority of specimens acquired (approx. 40,000) have had tissue samples (mostly liver) taken for genetic and biochemical research. These are held in the S.A. Museum's Australian Biological Tissue Collection. All specimens are individually registered and the data entered on a collections management system. All specimens are stored on-site in the S.A. Museum Science Centre alcohol storage facilities. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. The ALA also has a fully documented [API](http://api.ala.org.au/) Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e0cc2850-5096-44ec-9602-7b5abfaa2094,1880-2014,,Field definitions,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e0cc2850-5096-44ec-9602-7b5abfaa2094/resource/4f82f9ee-f5d3-4e1d-b8a2-f90a278d0f45/download/field-definitions-ala-sourced-data.csv,CSV,Field Definitions - Atlas of Living Australia datasets,2013-05-23T20:45:19.534335,2016-06-24T04:13:44.323858,19397.0,Creative Commons Attribution 862,South Australian Museum Herpetology Collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2013-03-21T05:07:17.288715,2020-02-18T01:28:14.693870,"Over 70,000 specimens have been registered in this collection, which has a particular emphasis on South Australian and arid zone fauna. A second major regional focus is Melanesia, especially the island of New Guinea (Papua New Guinea and Papua Province, Indonesia), with some 6,000 registered specimens. Most material is formalin-fixed and stored in 70% alcohol, with tadpoles stored in formalin. There is a significant dry skeletal collection of over 1,500 specimens, mostly skulls, and this will continue to be expanded. Since 1980, the great majority of specimens acquired (approx. 40,000) have had tissue samples (mostly liver) taken for genetic and biochemical research. These are held in the S.A. Museum's Australian Biological Tissue Collection. All specimens are individually registered and the data entered on a collections management system. All specimens are stored on-site in the S.A. Museum Science Centre alcohol storage facilities. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. The ALA also has a fully documented [API](http://api.ala.org.au/) Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e0cc2850-5096-44ec-9602-7b5abfaa2094,1880-2014,,Metadata Herpetology,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/storage/f/2013-05-15T02%3A30%3A03.534Z/metadata-tempate-herpetology.doc,DOC,"Contains information such as Short Description, Update Frequency, Last Updated, Organisation,File Format, Author, Mentors, Themes, etc ",2013-05-09T23:53:47.039883,2014-10-30T09:00:51,851968.0,Creative Commons Attribution 861,South Australian Museum Herpetology Collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2013-03-21T05:07:17.288715,2020-02-18T01:28:14.693870,"Over 70,000 specimens have been registered in this collection, which has a particular emphasis on South Australian and arid zone fauna. A second major regional focus is Melanesia, especially the island of New Guinea (Papua New Guinea and Papua Province, Indonesia), with some 6,000 registered specimens. Most material is formalin-fixed and stored in 70% alcohol, with tadpoles stored in formalin. There is a significant dry skeletal collection of over 1,500 specimens, mostly skulls, and this will continue to be expanded. Since 1980, the great majority of specimens acquired (approx. 40,000) have had tissue samples (mostly liver) taken for genetic and biochemical research. These are held in the S.A. Museum's Australian Biological Tissue Collection. All specimens are individually registered and the data entered on a collections management system. All specimens are stored on-site in the S.A. Museum Science Centre alcohol storage facilities. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. The ALA also has a fully documented [API](http://api.ala.org.au/) Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/e0cc2850-5096-44ec-9602-7b5abfaa2094,1880-2014,,SA Museum Herpetology Collection,https://collections.ala.org.au/public/show/co125,Mixed Formats,"Over 70,000 specimens have been registered in this collection, which has a particular emphasis on South Australian and arid zone fauna",2013-03-21T05:11:08.311453,2013-04-10T03:52:30.946234,32768.0,Creative Commons Attribution 860,South Australian Museum Mammalogy Collection,South Australian Museum,Alexis Tindall,2013-03-21T05:53:24.949394,2020-02-18T01:29:11.710141,"There are over 24,000 specimens in this collection, including skulls, skins, skeletons, spirit specimens, photographs and frozen tissue. It includes over 1600 marine mammals and its comprehensiveness makes this collection the best of its kind in Australia. Other strengths of the collection include South Australian arid zone native mammals, many specimens of extinct species such as the thylacine and large numbers of bat species. The collection has also historical importance as it includes many specimens from early expeditions in Australia and to the subantarctic Islands and Antarctica. Well-known people such as Sir Douglas Mawson, Edgar R. Waite and Hedley Finlayson have contributed to the collection. The mammal collection includes sub-fossils and remains from owl pellets. This collection consists entirely of Australian material with 20000 - 25000 specimens covering 76 mammal species (including introduced species). The collection is made up of bulk bone deposits from the floor of caves, bones excavated from sinkholes, bones extracted from predator scats (eg. dingoes, foxes and Ghost Bats), pellets from birds of prey, particularly barn owls (both recent and pre-settlement material), and stick nest rat nests and middens. The sub-fossil collection is the second best of its kind in Australia. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the Darwin Core metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA: http://www.ala.org.au/) and the Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums (OZCAM: http://www.ozcam.org.au/). Information about Darwin Core can be found here: http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm. Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the Spatial Analysis Portal (http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/35f2b0e5-a207-4114-b2c5-b2f12aa8b8ad,1880-2014,,Information about mammalogy at the South Australian Museum,https://www.samuseum.sa.gov.au/collections/biological-sciences/mammals,HTML,Information about mammalogy at the South Australian Museum.,2014-06-04T08:40:10.088620,2014-06-04T09:00:23.571729,9232.0,Creative Commons Attribution 859,South Australian Museum Mammalogy Collection,South Australian Museum,Alexis Tindall,2013-03-21T05:53:24.949394,2020-02-18T01:29:11.710141,"There are over 24,000 specimens in this collection, including skulls, skins, skeletons, spirit specimens, photographs and frozen tissue. It includes over 1600 marine mammals and its comprehensiveness makes this collection the best of its kind in Australia. Other strengths of the collection include South Australian arid zone native mammals, many specimens of extinct species such as the thylacine and large numbers of bat species. The collection has also historical importance as it includes many specimens from early expeditions in Australia and to the subantarctic Islands and Antarctica. Well-known people such as Sir Douglas Mawson, Edgar R. Waite and Hedley Finlayson have contributed to the collection. The mammal collection includes sub-fossils and remains from owl pellets. This collection consists entirely of Australian material with 20000 - 25000 specimens covering 76 mammal species (including introduced species). The collection is made up of bulk bone deposits from the floor of caves, bones excavated from sinkholes, bones extracted from predator scats (eg. dingoes, foxes and Ghost Bats), pellets from birds of prey, particularly barn owls (both recent and pre-settlement material), and stick nest rat nests and middens. The sub-fossil collection is the second best of its kind in Australia. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the Darwin Core metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA: http://www.ala.org.au/) and the Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums (OZCAM: http://www.ozcam.org.au/). Information about Darwin Core can be found here: http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm. Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the Spatial Analysis Portal (http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/35f2b0e5-a207-4114-b2c5-b2f12aa8b8ad,1880-2014,,Field definitions,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/35f2b0e5-a207-4114-b2c5-b2f12aa8b8ad/resource/42793acb-0f05-435b-bb80-475f9fd67553/download/field-definitions-ala-sourced-data.csv,CSV,Field Definitions - Atlas of Living Australia datasets,2013-05-23T20:46:54.017940,2016-06-30T05:30:45.221341,19397.0,Creative Commons Attribution 858,South Australian Museum Mammalogy Collection,South Australian Museum,Alexis Tindall,2013-03-21T05:53:24.949394,2020-02-18T01:29:11.710141,"There are over 24,000 specimens in this collection, including skulls, skins, skeletons, spirit specimens, photographs and frozen tissue. It includes over 1600 marine mammals and its comprehensiveness makes this collection the best of its kind in Australia. Other strengths of the collection include South Australian arid zone native mammals, many specimens of extinct species such as the thylacine and large numbers of bat species. The collection has also historical importance as it includes many specimens from early expeditions in Australia and to the subantarctic Islands and Antarctica. Well-known people such as Sir Douglas Mawson, Edgar R. Waite and Hedley Finlayson have contributed to the collection. The mammal collection includes sub-fossils and remains from owl pellets. This collection consists entirely of Australian material with 20000 - 25000 specimens covering 76 mammal species (including introduced species). The collection is made up of bulk bone deposits from the floor of caves, bones excavated from sinkholes, bones extracted from predator scats (eg. dingoes, foxes and Ghost Bats), pellets from birds of prey, particularly barn owls (both recent and pre-settlement material), and stick nest rat nests and middens. The sub-fossil collection is the second best of its kind in Australia. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the Darwin Core metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA: http://www.ala.org.au/) and the Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums (OZCAM: http://www.ozcam.org.au/). Information about Darwin Core can be found here: http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm. Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the Spatial Analysis Portal (http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/35f2b0e5-a207-4114-b2c5-b2f12aa8b8ad,1880-2014,,Metadata tempate- Mammalogy.doc,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/storage/f/2013-05-15T02%3A27%3A46.860Z/metadata-tempate-mammalogy.doc,DOC,High Level metadata for Mammalogy Collection.,2013-05-14T21:06:03.749733,2014-10-30T09:01:19,854016.0,Creative Commons Attribution 857,South Australian Museum Mammalogy Collection,South Australian Museum,Alexis Tindall,2013-03-21T05:53:24.949394,2020-02-18T01:29:11.710141,"There are over 24,000 specimens in this collection, including skulls, skins, skeletons, spirit specimens, photographs and frozen tissue. It includes over 1600 marine mammals and its comprehensiveness makes this collection the best of its kind in Australia. Other strengths of the collection include South Australian arid zone native mammals, many specimens of extinct species such as the thylacine and large numbers of bat species. The collection has also historical importance as it includes many specimens from early expeditions in Australia and to the subantarctic Islands and Antarctica. Well-known people such as Sir Douglas Mawson, Edgar R. Waite and Hedley Finlayson have contributed to the collection. The mammal collection includes sub-fossils and remains from owl pellets. This collection consists entirely of Australian material with 20000 - 25000 specimens covering 76 mammal species (including introduced species). The collection is made up of bulk bone deposits from the floor of caves, bones excavated from sinkholes, bones extracted from predator scats (eg. dingoes, foxes and Ghost Bats), pellets from birds of prey, particularly barn owls (both recent and pre-settlement material), and stick nest rat nests and middens. The sub-fossil collection is the second best of its kind in Australia. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the Darwin Core metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA: http://www.ala.org.au/) and the Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums (OZCAM: http://www.ozcam.org.au/). Information about Darwin Core can be found here: http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm. Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the Spatial Analysis Portal (http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/35f2b0e5-a207-4114-b2c5-b2f12aa8b8ad,1880-2014,,SA Museum Mammalogy Collection,https://collections.ala.org.au/public/show/co126,Mixed Formats,"There are over 24,000 specimens in this collection, including skulls, skins, skeletons, spirit specimens, photographs and frozen tissue. It includes over 1600 marine mammals and its comprehensiveness makes this collection the best of its kind in Australia.",2013-03-21T05:54:08.056604,2013-04-09T13:48:31.293049,32768.0,Creative Commons Attribution 856,South Australian Museum Ornithology Collection,South Australian Museum,Alexis Tindall,2013-03-21T05:59:59.088745,2020-02-18T01:29:42.117037,"This section houses over 55,000 registered and 6,000 unregistered specimens including skins, eggs, skeletons, nests and spirit collections. It has an excellent collection of South Australian species, both historical and recent, a large collection of stomach contents, which is used to determine diets, and an Australia wide collection of eggs. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the Darwin Core metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA: http://www.ala.org.au/) and the Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums (OZCAM: http://www.ozcam.org.au/). Information about Darwin Core can be found here: http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm. Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the Spatial Analysis Portal (http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a4fbf1a3-bb6f-4b59-860a-3283200e7a90,1860-2014,,Information about ornithology at the South Australian Museum,https://www.samuseum.sa.gov.au/collections/biological-sciences/birds,HTML,Information about ornithology at the South Australian Museum.,2014-06-04T08:31:28.782054,2014-06-04T09:00:26.048860,8458.0,Creative Commons Attribution 855,South Australian Museum Ornithology Collection,South Australian Museum,Alexis Tindall,2013-03-21T05:59:59.088745,2020-02-18T01:29:42.117037,"This section houses over 55,000 registered and 6,000 unregistered specimens including skins, eggs, skeletons, nests and spirit collections. It has an excellent collection of South Australian species, both historical and recent, a large collection of stomach contents, which is used to determine diets, and an Australia wide collection of eggs. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the Darwin Core metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA: http://www.ala.org.au/) and the Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums (OZCAM: http://www.ozcam.org.au/). Information about Darwin Core can be found here: http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm. Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the Spatial Analysis Portal (http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a4fbf1a3-bb6f-4b59-860a-3283200e7a90,1860-2014,,Field definitions,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a4fbf1a3-bb6f-4b59-860a-3283200e7a90/resource/d0a45398-a11e-446a-8368-f36c2ff44534/download/field-definitions-ala-sourced-data.csv,CSV,Field Definitions - Atlas of Living Australia datasets,2013-05-23T20:47:30.487267,2016-06-24T04:15:08.432141,19397.0,Creative Commons Attribution 854,South Australian Museum Ornithology Collection,South Australian Museum,Alexis Tindall,2013-03-21T05:59:59.088745,2020-02-18T01:29:42.117037,"This section houses over 55,000 registered and 6,000 unregistered specimens including skins, eggs, skeletons, nests and spirit collections. It has an excellent collection of South Australian species, both historical and recent, a large collection of stomach contents, which is used to determine diets, and an Australia wide collection of eggs. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the Darwin Core metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA: http://www.ala.org.au/) and the Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums (OZCAM: http://www.ozcam.org.au/). Information about Darwin Core can be found here: http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm. Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the Spatial Analysis Portal (http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a4fbf1a3-bb6f-4b59-860a-3283200e7a90,1860-2014,,Metadata tempate for Ornithology Collection,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/storage/f/2013-05-15T02%3A36%3A42.467Z/metadata-tempate-ornithology.doc,DOC,High level metadata information for Ornithology Collection,2013-05-14T21:38:19.384418,2014-10-30T09:01:26,851968.0,Creative Commons Attribution 853,South Australian Museum Ornithology Collection,South Australian Museum,Alexis Tindall,2013-03-21T05:59:59.088745,2020-02-18T01:29:42.117037,"This section houses over 55,000 registered and 6,000 unregistered specimens including skins, eggs, skeletons, nests and spirit collections. It has an excellent collection of South Australian species, both historical and recent, a large collection of stomach contents, which is used to determine diets, and an Australia wide collection of eggs. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the Darwin Core metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA: http://www.ala.org.au/) and the Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums (OZCAM: http://www.ozcam.org.au/). Information about Darwin Core can be found here: http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm. Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the Spatial Analysis Portal (http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a4fbf1a3-bb6f-4b59-860a-3283200e7a90,1860-2014,,SA Museum Ornithology Collection,https://collections.ala.org.au/public/show/co127,Mixed Formats,"This section houses over 55,000 registered and 6,000 unregistered specimens including skins, eggs, skeletons, nests and spirit collections. It has an excellent collection of South Australian species, both historical and recent, a large collection of stomach contents, which is used to determine diets, and an Australia wide collection of eggs.",2013-03-21T06:00:49.912951,2013-04-09T13:48:29.368728,32768.0,Creative Commons Attribution 852,South Australian Museum Ichthyology Collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2013-03-21T05:15:15.690837,2020-02-18T23:51:32.608265,"The South Australian Museum fish collection is comprised of over eleven thousand registered lots. The collection has a strong regional focus with freshwater fishes of southern and central Australia and Southern Ocean marine fishes, including deep-sea species, well represented. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a09d615c-79f1-4918-9cb4-8c4c636c80eb,1880-2014,,Information about ichthyology at the South Australian Museum,https://www.samuseum.sa.gov.au/collections/biological-sciences/fish,HTML,Information about ichthyology at the South Australian Museum,2014-06-04T08:35:49.718522,2014-06-04T09:00:24.940416,9196.0,Creative Commons Attribution 851,South Australian Museum Ichthyology Collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2013-03-21T05:15:15.690837,2020-02-18T23:51:32.608265,"The South Australian Museum fish collection is comprised of over eleven thousand registered lots. The collection has a strong regional focus with freshwater fishes of southern and central Australia and Southern Ocean marine fishes, including deep-sea species, well represented. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a09d615c-79f1-4918-9cb4-8c4c636c80eb,1880-2014,,Field definitions,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a09d615c-79f1-4918-9cb4-8c4c636c80eb/resource/75c5ae89-c3a9-42df-a320-216bf52b0ed8/download/field-definitions-ala-sourced-data.csv,CSV,Field Definitions - Atlas of Living Australia datasets,2013-05-23T20:46:11.826210,2016-06-24T04:16:27.495064,19397.0,Creative Commons Attribution 850,South Australian Museum Ichthyology Collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2013-03-21T05:15:15.690837,2020-02-18T23:51:32.608265,"The South Australian Museum fish collection is comprised of over eleven thousand registered lots. The collection has a strong regional focus with freshwater fishes of southern and central Australia and Southern Ocean marine fishes, including deep-sea species, well represented. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a09d615c-79f1-4918-9cb4-8c4c636c80eb,1880-2014,,Metadata tempate for Ichthyology Collection,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/storage/f/2013-05-15T02%3A32%3A23.338Z/metadata-tempate-ichthyology.doc,DOC,High Level metadata information for Ichthyology Collection,2013-05-14T21:36:03.682895,2014-10-30T09:00:45,851968.0,Creative Commons Attribution 849,South Australian Museum Ichthyology Collection,South Australian Museum,South Australian Museum,2013-03-21T05:15:15.690837,2020-02-18T23:51:32.608265,"The South Australian Museum fish collection is comprised of over eleven thousand registered lots. The collection has a strong regional focus with freshwater fishes of southern and central Australia and Southern Ocean marine fishes, including deep-sea species, well represented. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a09d615c-79f1-4918-9cb4-8c4c636c80eb,1880-2014,,SA Museum Ichthyology Collection,https://collections.ala.org.au/public/show/co57,HTML,"The fish collection is comprised of over eleven thousand registered lots. The collection has a strong regional focus with freshwater fishes of southern and central Australia and Southern Ocean marine fishes, including deep-sea species, well represented.",2013-03-21T05:16:04.727350,2013-04-10T03:52:29.999055,32768.0,Creative Commons Attribution 845,History Festival Archive,History Trust of South Australia,History Trust of South Australia,2015-05-14T07:15:48.169739,2017-06-27T02:07:34.579520,"The History Festival is held every year in May. This dataset contains an archive of festival events for 2013, 2014, 2015 and 2016.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/8606923a-8c21-4a2a-b31b-925f6fee4616,2013-05-01,2015-05-31,History Festival Events,https://data.history.sa.gov.au/abouttime/,API,"**History Festival Endpoints** **Events** http://data.history.sa.gov.au/abouttime/events/{year} Replace {year} with 2013, 2014 or 2015 **Event Detail** The nid field on each of the events (listed using the 'Events' endpoint) can be used to get event specific detail using the following endpoint: http://data.history.sa.gov.au/abouttime/event/{year}/{nid} Replace {year} with 2013, 2014, 2015 or 2016 Replace {nid} with the nid obtained from one of the events listing. **Event Images** The nid field on each of the events (listed using the 'Events' endpoint) can be used to get event images (including base64 values) using the following endpoint: http://data.history.sa.gov.au/abouttime/event/{year}/{nid}/files Replace {year} with 2013, 2014, 2015 or 2016 Replace {nid} with the nid obtained from one of the events listing.",2015-05-14T17:18:33.373635,,,Creative Commons Attribution 844,"Interned: Torrens Island, 1914-1915",History Trust of South Australia,History Trust of South Australia,2015-05-29T06:26:23.281710,2017-06-27T02:07:59.361209,"##Interned: Torrens Island, 1914-1915 In August 1914 war broke out across Europe. Within days ‘enemy subjects’ in Australia were required to register with the authorities. Most gave their ‘parole’ and went on with their lives in the community, but internment started with sailors taken off enemy ships and enemy reservists, and went on to include enemy subjects suspected of ‘disloyal or unsatisfactory’ behaviour. Later, some naturalised British subjects and even natural-born British subjects were interned. In the course of the war over 6,000 enemy subjects were interned across Australia. This dataset contains information about individuals interned during the First World War from South Australia (Military District 4). Most of those interned between October 1914 and August 1915, some 400 men, were held on Torrens Island, in the Port River estuary, north-west of Adelaide. The data set also includes those from South Australia who were interned in New South Wales after Torrens Island internment camp closed in August 1915. The data was compiled by History SA staff from two archival series in the National Archives of Australia: A367 C18000 Part 1, War Internees and Deportees 1914-1919 and D2286, Nominal Roll of prisoners of war interned at Torrens Island concentration camp 1915. Data fields include: Name, Also recorded as (alternative name), Date interned, Interned (at), Nationality, Date of birth/age, Remarks, and Notes. The data has been produced by identifying individuals who appear in both series and combining information from both series into this data set, using the A367 data as the primary series. This involved interpreting the data, in particular, making an assessment of whether or not entries in the two series with similar names represent the same person. Further research may reveal some of these assessments to be inaccurate. The dataset was produced as part of research for an exhibition at the Migration Museum and the Wakefield Press publication Interned: Torrens Island, 1914-15. http://migration.historysa.com.au/events/2014/interned-torrens-island-1914-1915 http://www.wakefieldpress.com.au/product.php?productid=1201 ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/eb04171a-1a75-4549-820d-fd20a1d434be,1939-01-01,1946-01-01,Internee Data,https://interned.historysa.com.au/js/data.js,JS,Information surrounding internees sourced from http://www.wakefieldpress.com.au/product.php?productid=1201 and National Australian Archives,2015-05-29T16:29:30.924997,2015-01-28T00:45:42,,Creative Commons Attribution 843,SA History Hub,History Trust of South Australia,History Trust of South Australia,2015-07-02T05:59:59.012059,2017-06-27T02:08:18.983918,"The SA History Hub website is an interactive way of engaging with the history of our state. This site is built on stories of South Australia's people, places and events, the city streets and the buildings and monuments that line them, and the events that enliven them. This data set presents places, things, organisations and events as geojson.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/53b4d7c2-a1b0-4b59-b7e0-28ee57db546e,1836-01-01,Current,Historical Events,https://data.history.sa.gov.au/sahistoryhub/event,GeoJSON,"#SA History Hub GEOJSON Endpoint http://data.history.sa.gov.au/sahistoryhub/{type} Replace {type} with any of the following types to obtain the current geojson for places, things or organisations stored on the SA History Hub website (http://sahistoryhub.com.au): * place * thing * organisation * event",2015-07-02T16:09:11.644509,,,Creative Commons Attribution 842,SA History Hub,History Trust of South Australia,History Trust of South Australia,2015-07-02T05:59:59.012059,2017-06-27T02:08:18.983918,"The SA History Hub website is an interactive way of engaging with the history of our state. This site is built on stories of South Australia's people, places and events, the city streets and the buildings and monuments that line them, and the events that enliven them. This data set presents places, things, organisations and events as geojson.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/53b4d7c2-a1b0-4b59-b7e0-28ee57db546e,1836-01-01,Current,Historical Organisations,https://data.history.sa.gov.au/sahistoryhub/organisation,GeoJSON,"#SA History Hub GEOJSON Endpoint http://data.history.sa.gov.au/sahistoryhub/{type} Replace {type} with any of the following types to obtain the current geojson for places, things or organisations stored on the SA History Hub website (http://sahistoryhub.com.au): * place * thing * organisation * event",2015-07-02T16:08:28.752458,,,Creative Commons Attribution 841,SA History Hub,History Trust of South Australia,History Trust of South Australia,2015-07-02T05:59:59.012059,2017-06-27T02:08:18.983918,"The SA History Hub website is an interactive way of engaging with the history of our state. This site is built on stories of South Australia's people, places and events, the city streets and the buildings and monuments that line them, and the events that enliven them. This data set presents places, things, organisations and events as geojson.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/53b4d7c2-a1b0-4b59-b7e0-28ee57db546e,1836-01-01,Current,Historical Things,https://data.history.sa.gov.au/sahistoryhub/thing,GeoJSON,"#SA History Hub GEOJSON Endpoint http://data.history.sa.gov.au/sahistoryhub/{type} Replace {type} with any of the following types to obtain the current geojson for places, things or organisations stored on the SA History Hub website (http://sahistoryhub.com.au): * place * thing * organisation * event",2015-07-02T16:06:51.936296,,,Creative Commons Attribution 840,SA History Hub,History Trust of South Australia,History Trust of South Australia,2015-07-02T05:59:59.012059,2017-06-27T02:08:18.983918,"The SA History Hub website is an interactive way of engaging with the history of our state. This site is built on stories of South Australia's people, places and events, the city streets and the buildings and monuments that line them, and the events that enliven them. This data set presents places, things, organisations and events as geojson.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/53b4d7c2-a1b0-4b59-b7e0-28ee57db546e,1836-01-01,Current,Historical Places,https://data.history.sa.gov.au/sahistoryhub/place,GeoJSON,"#SA History Hub GEOJSON Endpoint http://data.history.sa.gov.au/sahistoryhub/{type} Replace {type} with any of the following types to obtain the current geojson for places, things or organisations stored on the SA History Hub website (http://sahistoryhub.com.au): * place * thing * organisation * event",2015-07-02T16:03:37.435850,,,Creative Commons Attribution 839,Community History Live Stream,History Trust of South Australia,History Trust of South Australia,2015-05-15T01:26:37.366511,2017-06-27T02:08:43.727429,"The community history website is a place for community organisations, historical groups and individuals to come together to share their interests in and explore South Australia's community history. This dataset provides access to organisations, events, news and blogs that are displayed on the website. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/2ce2ab30-d17f-4902-b344-314e4b34538a,2011-04-01,2015-05-31,Community History Live Stream,https://data.history.sa.gov.au/communityhistory/,API,"**Community History Endpoints** **Organisations** http://data.history.sa.gov.au/communityhistory/organisations **News** http://data.history.sa.gov.au/communityhistory/news **Events** http://data.history.sa.gov.au/communityhistory/events **Blogs** http://data.history.sa.gov.au/communityhistory/blogs **Article Detail** The nid field on each of the items (listed using any of the above endpoints) can be used to get specific detail using the following endpoint: http://data.history.sa.gov.au/communityhistory/{nid} Replace {nid} with the nid obtained from one of the above endpoints. **Files** The nid field on each of the events (listed using any of the above endpoints) can be used to get associated files (including base64 values) using the following endpoint: http://data.history.sa.gov.au/communityhistory/{nid}/files Replace {nid} with the nid obtained from one of the above endpoints. **Taxonomy** http://data.history.sa.gov.au/communityhistory/taxonomy/{id} Replace {id} with the taxonomy term id (represented by target_id throughout content)",2015-05-15T11:33:00.199640,,,Creative Commons Attribution