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 836,South Australian Government Photographic Collection,History Trust of South Australia,History Trust of South Australia,2017-06-23T06:53:25.398879,2017-07-28T07:36:38.007416,"The collection broadly documents sixty-seven years of government activities, state celebrations, and the growth of industry, trade and townships between 1890 and 1957. The collection of 15,000 images includes 288 Frank Hurley images showcasing the state as part of its 1936 Centenary celebrations, as well as images of country shows and field days, educational institutions, hospitals and nursing, railway stations and infrastructure, shipping and ports, and the River Murray. The original glass plates are held by State Records of South Australia. The History Trust of South Australia holds the catalogue and digitised copy set of the collection. It is important to note that this is a historical collection and original information and photographic titles have been retained for research purposes in many instances. Some language used in the past by Government Departments may cause offence today but as a research collection we have maintained the original titles and language used to document this collection. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c5a3374b-bc28-41a5-9f7b-14d9b92e7350,,,South Australian Government Photographic Collection API,https://data.history.sa.gov.au/sagpc,API,"Refer to main page for information surrounding the end points. Meta data and images can be accessed through the API. An example of a basic implementation can be viewed at http://data.history.sa.gov.au/gallery.php?collection=sagpc&startindex=0 The example code can be downloaded from http://data.history.sa.gov.au/gallery.php.txt",2017-06-23T16:55:54.382324,,,Other (Open) 837,South Australian Government Photographic Collection,History Trust of South Australia,History Trust of South Australia,2017-06-23T06:53:25.398879,2017-07-28T07:36:38.007416,"The collection broadly documents sixty-seven years of government activities, state celebrations, and the growth of industry, trade and townships between 1890 and 1957. The collection of 15,000 images includes 288 Frank Hurley images showcasing the state as part of its 1936 Centenary celebrations, as well as images of country shows and field days, educational institutions, hospitals and nursing, railway stations and infrastructure, shipping and ports, and the River Murray. The original glass plates are held by State Records of South Australia. The History Trust of South Australia holds the catalogue and digitised copy set of the collection. It is important to note that this is a historical collection and original information and photographic titles have been retained for research purposes in many instances. Some language used in the past by Government Departments may cause offence today but as a research collection we have maintained the original titles and language used to document this collection. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c5a3374b-bc28-41a5-9f7b-14d9b92e7350,,,SA Government Photographic Collection,https://developers.sa.gov.au/docs/services/597822927515ee1398090666/operations/597a82807515ee0f204443b5,API,Developer Portal.,2017-07-28T17:36:38.052331,,,Other (Open) 834,Women’s Suffrage Petition 1894 (South Australia),History Trust of South Australia,History Trust of South Australia,2019-04-04T01:50:27.805462,2019-04-10T07:44:25.748567,"On 23 August 1894 George Hawker, member for North Adelaide, presented to the South Australian House of Assembly a petition in favour of women’s suffrage. It was signed by approximately 11,600 men and women. Members of the Women’s Suffrage League, Woman’s Christian Temperance Union, and the Working Women’s Trade Union were primarily responsible for collecting the signatures from metropolitan and country areas.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/3f6fab54-8cc8-4732-9c1e-fb3f73df53b0,1894-01-01,,Suffrage125 Petition,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/3f6fab54-8cc8-4732-9c1e-fb3f73df53b0/resource/68036d75-1ea2-4bb7-9efe-71ea7115227c/download/suffrage125_petition.json,JSON,,2019-04-04T02:17:13.619366,2019-04-04T02:17:13.572653,,Other (Open) 795,Mount Gambier Main Street Traders,Mount Gambier Library,Mount Gambier Library,2014-06-10T14:53:05.816908,2016-06-08T07:11:39.244861,"Historical information about commercial buildings and ownership in the Main Street of Mount Gambier including date information, owner and or company name, business type and newspaper article dates and references to the images held in the Les Hill Photographic Collection. Information is based on research of publicly available information.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/0e4a82b7-b1d9-47d8-8c74-3cb2ac296661,1847-1940,,Commercial Street Traders,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/storage/f/2014-06-10T14%3A54%3A17.368Z/commercial-street-traders-data-set.csv,CSV,Commercial Street Traders dataset,2014-06-10T15:02:46.951865,2014-10-30T09:01:35,354738.0,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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 910,South Australian Museum Minerals Collection,South Australian Museum,Alexis Tindall,2013-05-25T04:48:34.200039,2016-07-08T02:32:04.460744,"This collection includes approximately 33000 registered mineral specimens representing the range of minerals found in South Australia. More than 1500 species are represented, providing good coverage of the species and localities from across South Australia. The museum holds significant collections such as the Francis Collection, a comprehensive collection of the minerals of the Precambrian iron formations of the Middleback Ranges, quartz crystals from Mount Lofty Ranges White Rock Quarry, the Hall and Dunstan Collections, including secondary minerals of Broken Hill, and the O’Neill Collection, representing the Olympic Dam copper-gold-uranium deposit. The collection includes specimens from historically significant copper mines in Burra, Moonta and Wallaroo, and from South Australian opal fields. The data includes information about mineral species, varieties, localities from which specimens were collected and information about their acquisition. The South Australian Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. The full dataset is published on data.sa.gov.au as a .csv file.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/fe72a51c-def3-4229-b58c-cf9fef5d30ba,1865-2014,,South Australian Museum Minerals Collection,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/fe72a51c-def3-4229-b58c-cf9fef5d30ba/resource/40db1542-2685-48a9-8a2f-00bfc508a913/download/mineralogy.csv,CSV,"This collection includes approximately 33000 registered mineral specimens representing the range of minerals found in South Australia. More than 1500 species are represented, providing good coverage of the species and localities from across South Australia.",2013-05-24T23:49:27.443768,2016-07-08T02:32:04.425155,2497710.0,Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 918,South Australian Museum Meteorite Collection,South Australian Museum,Alexis Tindall,2013-05-25T04:42:17.987059,2016-07-03T23:29:22.729078,"The meteorite collection contains representative material from over 150 Australian and overseas meteorites, with the focus mainly on those that have been found in South Australia. The collection includes pieces from significant international meteorites, such as the Indian Shergotty and Egyptian Nakhla falls, since determined to have originated from Mars. The data includes the locality and date of finds, weight and other descriptive information, and information about their acquisition. The South Australian Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. The full dataset is published on data.sa.gov.au as a .csv file. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/1436651b-0684-42f1-b2e3-7dd113e2c007,1860-2014,,South Australian Museum Meteorite Collection,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/1436651b-0684-42f1-b2e3-7dd113e2c007/resource/f9acc218-808a-4a7a-87b3-22cf1962ce07/download/meteorites.csv,CSV,South Australian Museum Meteorite Collection.,2013-05-24T23:43:02.505701,2016-07-03T23:29:22.684608,49249.0,Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 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 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 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 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 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 911,South Australian Museum Minerals Collection,South Australian Museum,Alexis Tindall,2013-05-25T04:48:34.200039,2016-07-08T02:32:04.460744,"This collection includes approximately 33000 registered mineral specimens representing the range of minerals found in South Australia. More than 1500 species are represented, providing good coverage of the species and localities from across South Australia. The museum holds significant collections such as the Francis Collection, a comprehensive collection of the minerals of the Precambrian iron formations of the Middleback Ranges, quartz crystals from Mount Lofty Ranges White Rock Quarry, the Hall and Dunstan Collections, including secondary minerals of Broken Hill, and the O’Neill Collection, representing the Olympic Dam copper-gold-uranium deposit. The collection includes specimens from historically significant copper mines in Burra, Moonta and Wallaroo, and from South Australian opal fields. The data includes information about mineral species, varieties, localities from which specimens were collected and information about their acquisition. The South Australian Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. The full dataset is published on data.sa.gov.au as a .csv file.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/fe72a51c-def3-4229-b58c-cf9fef5d30ba,1865-2014,,SA Museum MInerals Collection - Metadata,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/storage/f/2013-05-25T04%3A49%3A50.457Z/metadata-tempate-minerals.doc,DOC,"This collection includes approximately 33000 registered mineral specimens representing the range of minerals found in South Australia. More than 1500 species are represented, providing good coverage of the species and localities from across South Australia. ",2013-05-24T23:50:33.091309,2014-10-30T09:00:42,851456.0,Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 919,South Australian Museum Meteorite Collection,South Australian Museum,Alexis Tindall,2013-05-25T04:42:17.987059,2016-07-03T23:29:22.729078,"The meteorite collection contains representative material from over 150 Australian and overseas meteorites, with the focus mainly on those that have been found in South Australia. The collection includes pieces from significant international meteorites, such as the Indian Shergotty and Egyptian Nakhla falls, since determined to have originated from Mars. The data includes the locality and date of finds, weight and other descriptive information, and information about their acquisition. The South Australian Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. The full dataset is published on data.sa.gov.au as a .csv file. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/1436651b-0684-42f1-b2e3-7dd113e2c007,1860-2014,,SA Museum Meteorite Collection - Metadata,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/storage/f/2013-05-25T04%3A43%3A26.490Z/metadata-tempate-meteorites.doc,DOC,"The meteorite collection contains representative material from over 150 Australian and overseas meteorites, with the focus mainly on those that have been found in South Australia. The collection includes pieces from significant international meteorites, such as the Indian Shergotty and Egyptian Nakhla falls, since determined to have originated from Mars. The data includes the locality and date of finds, weight and other descriptive information, and information about their acquisition. ",2013-05-24T23:44:19.808466,2014-10-30T09:00:39,851968.0,Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 912,South Australian Museum Minerals Collection,South Australian Museum,Alexis Tindall,2013-05-25T04:48:34.200039,2016-07-08T02:32:04.460744,"This collection includes approximately 33000 registered mineral specimens representing the range of minerals found in South Australia. More than 1500 species are represented, providing good coverage of the species and localities from across South Australia. The museum holds significant collections such as the Francis Collection, a comprehensive collection of the minerals of the Precambrian iron formations of the Middleback Ranges, quartz crystals from Mount Lofty Ranges White Rock Quarry, the Hall and Dunstan Collections, including secondary minerals of Broken Hill, and the O’Neill Collection, representing the Olympic Dam copper-gold-uranium deposit. The collection includes specimens from historically significant copper mines in Burra, Moonta and Wallaroo, and from South Australian opal fields. The data includes information about mineral species, varieties, localities from which specimens were collected and information about their acquisition. The South Australian Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. The full dataset is published on data.sa.gov.au as a .csv file.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/fe72a51c-def3-4229-b58c-cf9fef5d30ba,1865-2014,,Information about minerals at the South Australian Museum,https://www.samuseum.sa.gov.au/collections/mineral-sciences/minerals-meteorites-rocks,HTML,Information about minerals at the South Australian Museum.,2014-06-04T07:27:17.745289,,,Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 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 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 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 672,South Australians of World War 1 Photographs Flickr set,State Library of South Australia,Andrew Piper,2013-05-21T09:06:33.212603,2020-02-24T02:07:29.790770,"A selection (542) of portraits of soldiers. This set of portraits comes from our Chamberlain Collection and includes portraits of Soldiers prior to embarkation in studios and at various military camps in South Australia including Morphettville and Jubilee Oval. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/0384a465-903c-4b2b-93ec-826acbe2c66b,1914-1916,,Flickr API,https://www.flickr.com/services/api/,API,This dataset can be used in conjunction with the Flickr API.,2014-07-07T04:03:42.373664,2014-07-07T05:05:26.071019,20.0,Creative Commons Attribution 658,"River Murray general plan SA, 1910",State Library of South Australia,"Online Projects, State Library of South Australia",2014-06-22T16:54:49.101553,2022-01-24T04:26:16.272965,"Set of navigation charts of part of the South Australian section of the River Murray from Swan Reach to the eastern boundary of the State, 153 to 405 ¾ miles from the Murray mouth. Produced and issued by the Engineer-in-Chief’s Department, South Australia, published by A. Vaughan, SA Government Photo-lithographer in 1910. Scale approximately 1:9,600. Depths shown by soundings and shading. Shows surrounding roads and includes brief description of terrain and the vegetation beside the river. This dataset consists of 71 map files grouped as 18 plans or charts and including 1 key plan index to the set, provided in JPEG and PDF versions.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/2bf90e40-45bc-447b-8423-a122d682a9d9,1910,,River Murray general plan SA 1910,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/2bf90e40-45bc-447b-8423-a122d682a9d9/resource/64f3d218-572a-4391-bf80-94b62f252a14/download/river-murray-map835aj9600-v2.csv,CSV,"Set of navigation charts of part of the South Australian section of the River Murray from Swan Reach to the eastern boundary of the State, 153 to 405 ¾ miles from the Murray mouth.",2014-06-22T16:57:09.874279,2022-01-24T04:26:16.256181,32316.0,Creative Commons Attribution 703,South Australian Photographs World War 1 1914-1929,State Library of South Australia,Andrew Piper,2013-05-31T07:08:43.848160,2019-08-29T04:37:07.788643,"This dataset is an extract from the photographic collections of the State Library of South Australia and is related to World War 1.The set includes individual photographs and those that were collected in albums. Content includes portraits of soldiers, marches, camps, group shots, on location in the Dardanelles, and Western front, activities on the home front eg Cheer Up Societies, memorial dedications, captured albums eg captured German and Turkish images. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/49266c9b-ae27-47bc-8e23-866a2d027403,,,South Australian Photographs World War 1 - 1914-1929,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/49266c9b-ae27-47bc-8e23-866a2d027403/resource/7b89d80d-c74e-4647-bfa7-d1538b068a94/download/wwi_photographs.csv,CSV,"2153 images. **Explanation of fields** - **RECORD #** : SLSA unique identifier eg ""b20691051"" - **RECORD URL** : URL to the catalogue record in our database - **XML** : URL to the XML version of the catalogue record - **NAME** : Name of photographer if known - **TITLE** : Title of photograph - **Dates/Publication Details** : Includes the date of the photograph - **Description/Quantity** : Format and dimensions of the original image - **SUMMARY** : Summary information about the image, its content and context - **SUBJECT** : Subject headings assigned by the Library to assist searching - **Series/Collection** : Images may be aggregated as a collection - **IMAGE** : URL of the location of the web image ",2018-06-18T06:16:35.979137,2018-06-18T06:16:35.677045,,Creative Commons Attribution 705,South Australian Photographs World War 1 1914-1929,State Library of South Australia,Andrew Piper,2013-05-31T07:08:43.848160,2019-08-29T04:37:07.788643,"This dataset is an extract from the photographic collections of the State Library of South Australia and is related to World War 1.The set includes individual photographs and those that were collected in albums. Content includes portraits of soldiers, marches, camps, group shots, on location in the Dardanelles, and Western front, activities on the home front eg Cheer Up Societies, memorial dedications, captured albums eg captured German and Turkish images. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/49266c9b-ae27-47bc-8e23-866a2d027403,,,South Australian Photographs World War 1 - 1914-1929,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/49266c9b-ae27-47bc-8e23-866a2d027403/resource/ef4c0c93-2bdb-4fe2-ad26-fea2f0161551/download/saphotographswwi.csv,CSV,"Compiled 2017. This data set has been superseded by an updated version above in this Data and Resources list. 2103 images. **Explanation of fields** - **RECORD #** : SLSA unique identifier eg ""b20691051"" - **RECORD URL** : URL to the catalogue record in our database - **XML** : URL to the XML version of the catalogue record - **NAME** : Name of photographer if known - **TITLE** : Title of photograph - **Dates/Publication Details** : Includes the date of the photograph - **Description/Quantity** : Format and dimensions of the original image - **SUMMARY** : Summary information about the image, its content and context - **SUBJECT** : Subject headings assigned by the Library to assist searching - **Series/Collection** : Images may be aggregated as a collection - **IMAGE** : URL of the location of the web image ",2017-07-07T12:28:57.610553,2017-07-07T02:28:57.490338,,Creative Commons Attribution 707,South Australian Photographs World War 1 1914-1929,State Library of South Australia,Andrew Piper,2013-05-31T07:08:43.848160,2019-08-29T04:37:07.788643,"This dataset is an extract from the photographic collections of the State Library of South Australia and is related to World War 1.The set includes individual photographs and those that were collected in albums. Content includes portraits of soldiers, marches, camps, group shots, on location in the Dardanelles, and Western front, activities on the home front eg Cheer Up Societies, memorial dedications, captured albums eg captured German and Turkish images. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/49266c9b-ae27-47bc-8e23-866a2d027403,,,South Australian Photographs World War 1 - 1914-1929,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/49266c9b-ae27-47bc-8e23-866a2d027403/resource/76026372-d2f7-4257-b14b-fa6d2d4e5b95/download/saphotographswwi.csv,CSV,"Compiled 2016. This data set has been superseded by an updated version at the top of this Data and Resources list. 1769 images. **Explanation of fields** - **RECORD #** : SLSA unique identifier eg ""b20691051"" - **RECORD URL** : URL to the catalogue record in our database - **XML** : URL to the XML version of the catalogue record - **NAME** : Name of photographer if known - **TITLE** : Title of photograph - **Dates/Publication Details** : Includes the date of the photograph - **Description/Quantity** : Format and dimensions of the original image - **SUMMARY** : Summary information about the image, its content and context - **SUBJECT** : Subject headings assigned by the Library to assist searching - **Series/Collection** : Images may be aggregated as a collection - **IMAGE** : URL of the location of the web image",2016-07-01T17:35:16.663786,2016-07-01T07:35:16.542996,,Creative Commons Attribution 709,South Australian Photographs World War 1 1914-1929,State Library of South Australia,Andrew Piper,2013-05-31T07:08:43.848160,2019-08-29T04:37:07.788643,"This dataset is an extract from the photographic collections of the State Library of South Australia and is related to World War 1.The set includes individual photographs and those that were collected in albums. Content includes portraits of soldiers, marches, camps, group shots, on location in the Dardanelles, and Western front, activities on the home front eg Cheer Up Societies, memorial dedications, captured albums eg captured German and Turkish images. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/49266c9b-ae27-47bc-8e23-866a2d027403,,,South Australian Photographs World War 1 - 1914-1929,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/49266c9b-ae27-47bc-8e23-866a2d027403/resource/dd77a290-b868-444c-bd3d-6d1ba565577e/download/slsaphotosworldwar1.csv,CSV,"Compiled 2015. This data set has been superseded by an updated version at the top of this Data and Resources list. This data set is an extract from the photographic collections of the State Library of South Australia and is related to World War 1. The set will include individual photographs and those that were collected in albums. Content includes portraits of soldiers, marches, camps, group shots, on location in the Dardanelles, and Western front, activities on the home front e.g. Cheer Up Societies, memorial dedications, captured albums e.g. captured German and Turkish images.",2015-07-01T11:38:47.920554,,,Creative Commons Attribution 764,South Australian Sheet Music 1852-1927,State Library of South Australia,"Online Projects, State Library of South Australia",2013-03-07T14:38:12.818813,2019-08-29T02:33:15.378498,Selected sheet music (100 individual songs) related to or published in South Australia. The collection is particularly strong on the genre of patriotic songs from World War One and sentimental ballads. Includes full colour scan of the sheet music and additional contextual research. ,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/02f2e8e0-f843-4a37-9e0a-eeb4d366991c,1852-1927,,South Australian Sheet Music 1852-1927,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/02f2e8e0-f843-4a37-9e0a-eeb4d366991c/resource/62c7cae5-3052-4cef-9286-e05d57e0f5ed/download/sasheetmusic_2011.csv,CSV,"Selected sheet music (101 individual songs) related to or published in South Australia. The collection is particularly strong on the genre of patriotic songs from World War One and sentimental ballads. Includes full colour scan of the sheet music and additional contextual research. **Explanation of fields** - **id** : ID from the originating content management system - **title** : title of the sheet music - **creator** : creator of the music - **innopac** : URL of the bibliographic record in the Library's catalogue - **link** : URL of the sheet music's entry in the SA Memory web site, with an image of the sheet music - **coverage_place** : geographic place covered (if applicable) e.g., Loxton - **coverage_region** : geographic region covered (if applicable) e.g., Riverland - **fileBrowse** : one or more links to images of the sheet music NOTE: to be a usable URL, the enclosing link tags will need to be removed - **FurtherInfo** : other interesting information - **Reading** : further reading - **longitude** : if available - **latitude** : if available - **original_format** : original format of the item -- in this case, sheet music - **publisher** : who published the sheet music - **place_of_creation** : place where the sheet music was published - **additional_creator** : other names who were involved in creating the sheet music - **sibelius_score** : Sibelius is software that enabled the sheet music to be played automatically. You can ignore this. This was old technology from 2005 and used on the National Library of Australia's 'Music Australia' web site that now forms part of Trove. http://trove.nla.gov.au/general/australian-music-in-trove - **coverage_period** : coverage period e.g., 1914-1918 - **coverage_year** : specific year (not used here)",2013-03-20T22:55:14.341001,2019-08-29T02:32:54.388330,226256.0,Creative Commons Attribution 765,SA Memory,State Library of South Australia,State Library of South Australia,2013-03-07T16:15:35.228085,2019-08-29T02:29:51.427322,"A selected and wide range of digitised archival and published materials from the State Library of South Australia’s SA Memory program. SA Memory is an online gateway to South Australian history, heritage and culture. This multimedia website focuses on the South Australian experience – what makes South Australia unique. SA Memory illustrates and interprets themes to highlight South Australia’s people, places, issues and events from the colony’s beginnings to contemporary times: South Australia’s ‘memory’. http://www.samemory.sa.gov.au/site/page.cfm",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/7cd90f98-1d89-4921-8373-151f4ad5d1a1,1836-2010,,SA Memory,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/7cd90f98-1d89-4921-8373-151f4ad5d1a1/resource/4e3c2761-9938-4da1-9208-764fa204fda1/download/samemorycontentobjects_2011.csv,CSV,"A selected and wide range of digitised archival and published materials (1101 items) from the State Library of South Australia's SA Memory program. SA Memory is an online gateway to South Australian history, heritage and culture. This multimedia website focuses on the South Australian experience – what makes South Australia unique. SA Memory illustrates and interprets themes to highlight South Australia's people, places, issues and events from the colony's beginnings to contemporary times: South Australia's 'memory'. **Explanation of fields** - **id** : ID from the originating content management system - **TITLE** : title of the item's web page in the SA Memory web site - **CREATOR** : creator of the item displayed on the SA Memory web site - **INNOPAC** : URL of the record in the Library's catalogue - **LINK** : URL of the item's SA Memory web page, with an image of the item - **coverage_place** : geographic place covered (if applicable) e.g., Loxton - **COVERAGE_REGION** : geographic region covered (if applicable) e.g., Riverland - **FILE_BROWSE** : URL or partial URL of the image displayed on the item's web page NOTE: to be a usable URL, the enclosing link tags will need to be removed, and if it is a partial URL starting with /webdata/, then prepend http://www.samemory.sa.gov.au - **FURTHER_INFO** : other interesting information about the item - [unused field] - **LATITUDE** : latitude in decimal degrees (if available) - **LONGITUDE** : longitude in decimal degrees (if available) - **ORIGINAL_FORMAT** : original format of the item - **PUBLISHER** : who published the item - **PLACE_OF_CREATION** : place where the item was published - **ADDITIONAL_CREATOR** : other names who were involved in creating the item - **COVERAGE_PERIOD** : coverage period e.g., 1914-1918 - **COVERAGE_YEAR** : specific year (not used here)",2013-05-31T01:01:00.469271,2019-08-28T23:40:58.400220,1495812.0,Creative Commons Attribution 781,Bradman Collection,State Library of South Australia,State Library of South Australia,2013-11-19T00:30:39.276203,2016-07-06T03:58:04.742146,"Selection of images (53) from the State Library of South Australia’s Bradman Collection. Sir Donald Bradman is regarded by many as the greatest batsman in the history of cricket and was one of Australia's most revered sporting personalities. From the late 1960s he donated much of his personal collection of cricket memorabilia to the State Library of South Australia, in total more than 150 items including trophies, bats, balls, tape recordings, photographs and cricketing apparel. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/08119936-12ac-40d9-85ec-75fafcd60156,1926-1975,,Bradman Collection,https://www.flickr.com/photos/state_library_south_australia/sets/72157634981855890/,CSV,"This selection from the Bradman Collection features handpicked and newly photographed highlights from the collection. Highlights include • The bat used to score his first Test century • The bat used to score his 100th century in first-class cricket • The bat used to score the then world record 334 • Australian, South Australian and New South Wales team blazers worn by Sir Donald between 1927 and 1947 • Royal Worcester vase presented to Sir Donald in 1938 to commemorate scoring three consecutive double centuries on the Worcester ground in England • A silver replica of the antique Roman marble vase at Warwick Castle, purchased in 1948 following a public subscription sponsored by The People newspaper • Australian, South Australian and New South Wales team photographs • Newspaper banners",2013-11-18T18:41:14.934593,2014-10-30T08:13:02.380367,420638.0,Creative Commons Attribution 790,"Australia 1:63,360 military survey (S.A.), 1914-1958",State Library of South Australia,"Online Projects, State Library of South Australia",2014-06-22T16:40:44.929206,2016-06-08T01:47:53.690120,"Military survey maps from the Australia 1 inch to the mile series held in the State Library of South Australia’s map collections. This map series was originally prepared by the Australian Section Imperial General Staff and later by the Royal Australian Survey Corps. These topographic maps at scale 1:63,360 include roads, railways, towns, rivers, creeks and farms, and some cadastral detail. Relief is shown by contours and spot heights. This dataset is a selection from the Australia 1:63,360 series of the 20 map sheets that cover South Australia. Including editions and variations the State Library’s holdings of SA coverage totals 49 map sheets provided in JPEG and PDF versions.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/2e0da08c-6d18-4469-ad77-d9b266e30f0c,1914-1958,,"Australia 1:63,360 military survey (S.A.), 1914-1958",https://data.sa.gov.au/data/storage/f/2014-06-22T16%3A41%3A06.678Z/map830ac63360-sa-military-survey.csv,CSV,Military survey maps from the Australia 1 inch to the mile series held in the State Library of South Australia’s map collections.,2014-06-22T16:44:36.365111,2014-10-30T09:01:22,89544.0,Creative Commons Attribution 792,"Adelaide plan 40 feet to 1 inch, fire insurance maps, 1911-1914",State Library of South Australia,"Online Projects, State Library of South Australia",2014-06-22T16:20:16.664531,2016-06-06T05:46:02.528493,"Set of detailed fire insurance maps from the State Library of South Australia’s map collections. The map set covers part of the City of Adelaide, South Australia and was surveyed and drawn 1911-1914 by John Reid Ferguson for the Fire Underwriters' Association of South Australia. Scale approximately 1:480. Includes parts of North Terrace, King William Street, Rundle Street (Mall), Adelaide Arcade, Gawler Place, Grenfell street, Pulteney Street, Hindmarsh Square, Pirie Street, Flinders Street and Hindley Street. Shows land use including building usage, some street numbers and business names. This dataset consists of 21 map files in JPEG & PDF versions.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c2b6d9a4-9b7e-42bd-9cba-856320e2e139,1911-1914,,Fire insurance maps (1911-1914),https://data.sa.gov.au/data/storage/f/2014-06-22T16%3A22%3A08.675Z/c112-fire-insurance-maps-v2.csv,CSV,Set of detailed fire insurance maps from the State Library of South Australia’s map collections. ,2014-06-22T16:25:20.545464,2014-10-30T09:01:35,17437.0,Creative Commons Attribution 671,South Australians of World War 1 Photographs Flickr set,State Library of South Australia,Andrew Piper,2013-05-21T09:06:33.212603,2020-02-24T02:07:29.790770,"A selection (542) of portraits of soldiers. This set of portraits comes from our Chamberlain Collection and includes portraits of Soldiers prior to embarkation in studios and at various military camps in South Australia including Morphettville and Jubilee Oval. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/0384a465-903c-4b2b-93ec-826acbe2c66b,1914-1916,,South Australians of World War 1 Photographs,https://www.flickr.com/photos/state_library_south_australia/sets/72157632937420680/,JPEG,A selection (542) of portraits of soliders.,2014-07-07T04:01:19.707001,2014-07-07T05:05:25.579072,20.0,Creative Commons Attribution 673,South Australians of World War 1 Photographs Flickr set,State Library of South Australia,Andrew Piper,2013-05-21T09:06:33.212603,2020-02-24T02:07:29.790770,"A selection (542) of portraits of soldiers. This set of portraits comes from our Chamberlain Collection and includes portraits of Soldiers prior to embarkation in studios and at various military camps in South Australia including Morphettville and Jubilee Oval. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/0384a465-903c-4b2b-93ec-826acbe2c66b,1914-1916,,Trove,https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper?q=,JPEG,"This data set can also be used in conjunction with Trove. Trove helps you find and use resources relating to Australia. It’s more than a search engine. Trove brings together content from libraries, museums, archives and other research organisations and gives you tools to explore and build. ",2014-07-07T04:07:34.508249,2014-10-14T22:12:02.413460,,Creative Commons Attribution 680,Significant South Australians Photographs,State Library of South Australia,State Library of South Australia,2013-05-21T09:02:06.138696,2020-01-15T06:44:24.506061,"Selection of images (60) from the State Library of South Australia collections of Significant South Australians featuring selected men and women of Adelaide's North Terrace plaques. These are a selection of images from a range of subjects and other State library photo sets on Flickr and range from 1815-1951, and includes: Dervish Bejah, Cameleer and explorer Sir Donald Bradman, Cricketer Kate Boadicea Cocks, first female police constable in the British Empire Matthew Flinders, Navigator and explorer Donald Dunstan, Lawyer, reformist, social progressive and Premier of South Australia Rev John Flynn, Founded what became the Royal Flying Doctor Service Sir Robert Helpmann Dancer, choreographer, actor and director Sir Hans Heysen artist and conservationist Colonel William Light Surveyor General, South Australia Mother Mary Mackillop (now Saint Mary of the Cross), Catholic sister, educator and Australia’s first saint Sir Douglas Mawson, Geologist and Antarctic explorer Dame Roma Mitchell, Australia’s first female judge Catherine Helen Spence, Author, journalist, teacher, suffragist, political candidate John McDouall Stuart, Explorer Mary Lee, Suffragist and social reformer Mark Oliphant, Physicist, humanitarian, Governor of South Australia Thomas Playford, Longest serving Premier of South Australia Sir Ross and Sir Keith Smith, piloted first aeroplane from England to Australia Charles Sturt, Soldier and explorer David Unaipon, Aboriginal leader, preacher, inventor and writer ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/167684de-6a7a-4957-9bb7-b14c26660127,1815-1951,,Significant South Australians Photographs 1815-1951,https://www.flickr.com/photos/state_library_south_australia/sets/72157629151043184/,JPEG,"Selection of images (60) from the State Library of South Australia collections of Significant South Australians featuring selected men and women of Adelaide's North Terrace plaques. These are a selection of images from a range of subjects and other State library photo sets on Flickr and range from 1815-1951. ",2013-05-22T00:54:02.731823,2013-05-22T01:00:06.659078,20.0,Creative Commons Attribution 682,Lost Adelaide Architecture Photographs,State Library of South Australia,"Online Projects, State Library of South Australia",2013-05-21T07:06:04.920232,2020-01-15T06:43:11.152721,"Two photo sets on Flickr containing photographs of Lost Adelaide architecture from Central Adelaide (78 photographs) and Adelaide’s West End (70 photographs). These photographs have been used in two of the State Library’s walking tours for hand held devices, Lost Adelaide and Lost Adelaide: West End. Contains brief information about each building and location.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/2b0e3d83-159f-4118-a7e2-9612367372ed,1846-1966,,Lost Adelaide Photographs,https://www.flickr.com/photos/state_library_south_australia/sets/72157626397640297/,JPEG,"Photographs of Lost Adelaide architecture from Central Adelaide (78 photographs). These photographs have been used in two of the State Library’s walking tours for hand held devices, Lost Adelaide and Lost Adelaide: West End.",2013-05-21T02:07:25.828298,2013-05-21T03:00:08.612701,20.0,Creative Commons Attribution 683,Lost Adelaide Architecture Photographs,State Library of South Australia,"Online Projects, State Library of South Australia",2013-05-21T07:06:04.920232,2020-01-15T06:43:11.152721,"Two photo sets on Flickr containing photographs of Lost Adelaide architecture from Central Adelaide (78 photographs) and Adelaide’s West End (70 photographs). These photographs have been used in two of the State Library’s walking tours for hand held devices, Lost Adelaide and Lost Adelaide: West End. Contains brief information about each building and location.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/2b0e3d83-159f-4118-a7e2-9612367372ed,1846-1966,,Lost Adelaide - West End Photographs,https://www.flickr.com/photos/state_library_south_australia/sets/72157632985933882/,JPEG,"Photographs of Lost Adelaide architecture from Adelaide’s West End (70 photographs). These photographs have been used in two of the State Library’s walking tours for hand held devices, Lost Adelaide and Lost Adelaide: West End.",2013-05-21T02:08:51.061745,2013-05-21T03:00:09.678618,20.0,Creative Commons Attribution 685,Water in South Australia Photographs,State Library of South Australia,State Library of South Australia,2013-05-21T09:17:14.679278,2019-11-15T06:18:32.384891,"Selected images (89) demonstrating South Australia’s relationship to water. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/70a74bde-2be4-4e1c-92b8-7c2e8be53e20,1846-1975,,Water in South Australia Photographs,https://www.flickr.com/photos/state_library_south_australia/sets/72157626083647962/,JPEG,"Selected images (89) demonstrating South Australia’s relationship to water. Topics include: Significant, Sport, Military, Women and War, Murray Bridge, Militaria, transport, River Murray steamers. Dates range from 1846 to 1975. This dataset can be used in conjunction with the Flickr API http://www.flickr.com/services/api/ .",2013-05-21T04:18:12.341318,2013-05-21T05:01:09.085333,20.0,Creative Commons Attribution 686,Murray Bridge Photographs,State Library of South Australia,"Online projects, State Library of South Australia",2013-05-21T08:35:27.894785,2019-11-15T06:10:14.516240,Selected images (54) from the State Library of South Australia collections of Murray Bridge.,data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/02ae1642-b8cc-4c98-a7d7-6e2c7e1ec7cb,1870-1975,,Murray Bridge Photographs,https://www.flickr.com/photos/state_library_south_australia/sets/72157623894248488/,JPEG,Selected images (54) from the State Library of South Australia collections of Murray Bridge. This dataset can be used in conjunction with the Flickr API http://www.flickr.com/services/api/ .,2013-05-21T03:36:42.998195,2013-05-21T04:00:11.178483,20.0,Creative Commons Attribution 659,"River Murray general plan SA, 1910",State Library of South Australia,"Online Projects, State Library of South Australia",2014-06-22T16:54:49.101553,2022-01-24T04:26:16.272965,"Set of navigation charts of part of the South Australian section of the River Murray from Swan Reach to the eastern boundary of the State, 153 to 405 ¾ miles from the Murray mouth. Produced and issued by the Engineer-in-Chief’s Department, South Australia, published by A. Vaughan, SA Government Photo-lithographer in 1910. Scale approximately 1:9,600. Depths shown by soundings and shading. Shows surrounding roads and includes brief description of terrain and the vegetation beside the river. This dataset consists of 71 map files grouped as 18 plans or charts and including 1 key plan index to the set, provided in JPEG and PDF versions.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/2bf90e40-45bc-447b-8423-a122d682a9d9,1910,,Additional information.txt,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/storage/f/2014-06-22T16%3A58%3A33.154Z/additional-information.txt,TXT,Additional Information.,2014-06-22T16:58:56.130318,2014-06-22T18:00:22.541867,1418.0,Creative Commons Attribution 782,Bradman Collection,State Library of South Australia,State Library of South Australia,2013-11-19T00:30:39.276203,2016-07-06T03:58:04.742146,"Selection of images (53) from the State Library of South Australia’s Bradman Collection. Sir Donald Bradman is regarded by many as the greatest batsman in the history of cricket and was one of Australia's most revered sporting personalities. From the late 1960s he donated much of his personal collection of cricket memorabilia to the State Library of South Australia, in total more than 150 items including trophies, bats, balls, tape recordings, photographs and cricketing apparel. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/08119936-12ac-40d9-85ec-75fafcd60156,1926-1975,,Field Descriptions,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/storage/f/2014-06-11T07%3A40%3A15.046Z/field-descriptions.txt,TXT,Field descriptions for Bradman Collection.,2013-11-18T19:10:13.479203,2014-10-30T09:01:38,758.0,Creative Commons Attribution 791,"Australia 1:63,360 military survey (S.A.), 1914-1958",State Library of South Australia,"Online Projects, State Library of South Australia",2014-06-22T16:40:44.929206,2016-06-08T01:47:53.690120,"Military survey maps from the Australia 1 inch to the mile series held in the State Library of South Australia’s map collections. This map series was originally prepared by the Australian Section Imperial General Staff and later by the Royal Australian Survey Corps. These topographic maps at scale 1:63,360 include roads, railways, towns, rivers, creeks and farms, and some cadastral detail. Relief is shown by contours and spot heights. This dataset is a selection from the Australia 1:63,360 series of the 20 map sheets that cover South Australia. Including editions and variations the State Library’s holdings of SA coverage totals 49 map sheets provided in JPEG and PDF versions.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/2e0da08c-6d18-4469-ad77-d9b266e30f0c,1914-1958,,Additional information.txt,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/storage/f/2014-06-22T16%3A44%3A48.104Z/additional-information.txt,TXT,Additional Information.,2014-06-22T16:45:16.261133,2014-10-30T09:01:13,1666.0,Creative Commons Attribution 793,"Adelaide plan 40 feet to 1 inch, fire insurance maps, 1911-1914",State Library of South Australia,"Online Projects, State Library of South Australia",2014-06-22T16:20:16.664531,2016-06-06T05:46:02.528493,"Set of detailed fire insurance maps from the State Library of South Australia’s map collections. The map set covers part of the City of Adelaide, South Australia and was surveyed and drawn 1911-1914 by John Reid Ferguson for the Fire Underwriters' Association of South Australia. Scale approximately 1:480. Includes parts of North Terrace, King William Street, Rundle Street (Mall), Adelaide Arcade, Gawler Place, Grenfell street, Pulteney Street, Hindmarsh Square, Pirie Street, Flinders Street and Hindley Street. Shows land use including building usage, some street numbers and business names. This dataset consists of 21 map files in JPEG & PDF versions.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c2b6d9a4-9b7e-42bd-9cba-856320e2e139,1911-1914,,Additional information.txt,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/storage/f/2014-06-22T16%3A26%3A44.320Z/additional-information.txt,TXT,Additional Information.,2014-06-22T16:27:15.340576,2014-10-30T09:01:40,1184.0,Creative Commons Attribution 704,South Australian Photographs World War 1 1914-1929,State Library of South Australia,Andrew Piper,2013-05-31T07:08:43.848160,2019-08-29T04:37:07.788643,"This dataset is an extract from the photographic collections of the State Library of South Australia and is related to World War 1.The set includes individual photographs and those that were collected in albums. Content includes portraits of soldiers, marches, camps, group shots, on location in the Dardanelles, and Western front, activities on the home front eg Cheer Up Societies, memorial dedications, captured albums eg captured German and Turkish images. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/49266c9b-ae27-47bc-8e23-866a2d027403,,,South Australian Photographs World War 1 - 1914-1929 (Excel workbook),https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/49266c9b-ae27-47bc-8e23-866a2d027403/resource/213155c0-6caa-4c08-a1bb-425461fb76ef/download/wwi_photographs.xlsx,XLSX,This Excel workbook contains the same data as the corresponding CSV file but has the advantage that URLs are active hyperlinks.,2018-06-18T06:20:13.997067,2018-06-18T06:20:13.564676,,Creative Commons Attribution 706,South Australian Photographs World War 1 1914-1929,State Library of South Australia,Andrew Piper,2013-05-31T07:08:43.848160,2019-08-29T04:37:07.788643,"This dataset is an extract from the photographic collections of the State Library of South Australia and is related to World War 1.The set includes individual photographs and those that were collected in albums. Content includes portraits of soldiers, marches, camps, group shots, on location in the Dardanelles, and Western front, activities on the home front eg Cheer Up Societies, memorial dedications, captured albums eg captured German and Turkish images. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/49266c9b-ae27-47bc-8e23-866a2d027403,,,South Australian Photographs World War 1 - 1914-1929 (Excel workbook),https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/49266c9b-ae27-47bc-8e23-866a2d027403/resource/5d6ed653-c45d-44f7-ada4-b0d6ceee1484/download/saphotographswwi.xlsx,XLSX,"Compiled 2017. This data set has been superseded by an updated version above in this Data and Resources list. This Excel workbook contains the same data as the corresponding CSV file but has the advantage that URLs are active hyperlinks. ",2017-07-07T12:31:19.902519,2017-07-07T02:31:19.785020,,Creative Commons Attribution 708,South Australian Photographs World War 1 1914-1929,State Library of South Australia,Andrew Piper,2013-05-31T07:08:43.848160,2019-08-29T04:37:07.788643,"This dataset is an extract from the photographic collections of the State Library of South Australia and is related to World War 1.The set includes individual photographs and those that were collected in albums. Content includes portraits of soldiers, marches, camps, group shots, on location in the Dardanelles, and Western front, activities on the home front eg Cheer Up Societies, memorial dedications, captured albums eg captured German and Turkish images. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/49266c9b-ae27-47bc-8e23-866a2d027403,,,South Australian Photographs World War 1 - 1914-1929 (Excel workbook),https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/49266c9b-ae27-47bc-8e23-866a2d027403/resource/aa9c5e66-23db-4519-924a-0ae71ca2f9b7/download/unleashed2016sawwiphotographs.xlsx,XLSX,"Compiled 2016. This data set has been superseded by an updated version at the top of this Data and Resources list. This Excel workbook contains the same data as the CSV file but has the advantage that URLs are active hyperlinks.",2016-07-01T17:37:43.280616,2016-07-01T07:37:43.164618,,Creative Commons Attribution 687,Old Colonists photographs,State Library of South Australia,State Library of South Australia,2019-06-17T04:23:32.034128,2019-08-29T04:44:14.837878,"Portrait photographs of 'Old Colonists' – settlers who arrived in the colony of South Australia before 1841. The men Old Colonists were invited to attend a banquet held by businessman Emanuel Solomon on 28 December 1871 to commemorate 35 years since European colonisation. Photographs are sourced from two composite or 'mosaic' photographs, one of men and one of women.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/9f1775b6-9c4f-4e27-819b-33c83d0601f9,1856-01-01,1885-12-31,Old Colonists Men,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/9f1775b6-9c4f-4e27-819b-33c83d0601f9/resource/982e89d4-066c-467d-a078-e8cf39228d7d/download/old_colonists_men.csv,CSV,"515 photographs **Explanation of fields** - **RECORD #(BIBLIO)** : SLSA unique identifier eg ""b31236881"" - **RECORD URL** : URL to the catalogue record in our database - **RECORD XML** : URL to the XML version of the catalogue record - **NAME** : Name of photographer - **TITLE** : Title of photograph - **DATES/PUBLICATION DETAILS** : Date of the photograph - **DESCRIPTION/QUANTITY** : Format and dimensions of the original image - **SUMMARY** : Summary information about the image, its content and context - **SUBJECT** : Subject headings assigned by the Library to assist searching - **SERIES/COLLECTION** : Images may be aggregated as a collection - **IMAGE URL** : URL of the web image - **MOSAIC URL** : URL of the composite photograph of all portraits",2019-06-17T04:26:30.618656,2019-06-17T04:26:30.557168,,Creative Commons Attribution 689,Old Colonists photographs,State Library of South Australia,State Library of South Australia,2019-06-17T04:23:32.034128,2019-08-29T04:44:14.837878,"Portrait photographs of 'Old Colonists' – settlers who arrived in the colony of South Australia before 1841. The men Old Colonists were invited to attend a banquet held by businessman Emanuel Solomon on 28 December 1871 to commemorate 35 years since European colonisation. Photographs are sourced from two composite or 'mosaic' photographs, one of men and one of women.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/9f1775b6-9c4f-4e27-819b-33c83d0601f9,1856-01-01,1885-12-31,Old Colonists Women,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/9f1775b6-9c4f-4e27-819b-33c83d0601f9/resource/88b20768-1d58-4879-8ffd-631119c11d1c/download/old_colonists_women.csv,CSV,"600 photographs **Explanation of fields** - **RECORD #(BIBLIO)** : SLSA unique identifier eg ""b2074769x"" - **RECORD URL** : URL to the catalogue record in our database - **RECORD XML** : URL to the XML version of the catalogue record - **NAME** : Name of photographer - **TITLE** : Title of photograph - **DATES/PUBLICATION DETAILS** : Date of the photograph - **DESCRIPTION/QUANTITY** : Format and dimensions of the original image - **SUMMARY** : Summary information about the image, its content and context - **SUBJECT** : Subject headings assigned by the Library to assist searching - **SERIES/COLLECTION** : Images may be aggregated as a collection - **IMAGE URL** : URL of the web image - **MOSAIC URL** : URL of the composite photograph of all portraits",2019-06-17T05:19:00.981788,2019-06-17T05:19:00.884090,,Creative Commons Attribution 688,Old Colonists photographs,State Library of South Australia,State Library of South Australia,2019-06-17T04:23:32.034128,2019-08-29T04:44:14.837878,"Portrait photographs of 'Old Colonists' – settlers who arrived in the colony of South Australia before 1841. The men Old Colonists were invited to attend a banquet held by businessman Emanuel Solomon on 28 December 1871 to commemorate 35 years since European colonisation. Photographs are sourced from two composite or 'mosaic' photographs, one of men and one of women.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/9f1775b6-9c4f-4e27-819b-33c83d0601f9,1856-01-01,1885-12-31,Old Colonists Men - Excel workbook,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/9f1775b6-9c4f-4e27-819b-33c83d0601f9/resource/d2c7f711-a6d5-467e-86f3-cd0c10edd483/download/old_colonists_men.xlsx,XLSX,This Excel workbook contains the same data as the CSV file but has the advantage that URLs are active hyperlinks.,2019-06-17T05:17:29.039183,2019-06-17T05:17:28.980182,,Creative Commons Attribution 690,Old Colonists photographs,State Library of South Australia,State Library of South Australia,2019-06-17T04:23:32.034128,2019-08-29T04:44:14.837878,"Portrait photographs of 'Old Colonists' – settlers who arrived in the colony of South Australia before 1841. The men Old Colonists were invited to attend a banquet held by businessman Emanuel Solomon on 28 December 1871 to commemorate 35 years since European colonisation. Photographs are sourced from two composite or 'mosaic' photographs, one of men and one of women.",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/9f1775b6-9c4f-4e27-819b-33c83d0601f9,1856-01-01,1885-12-31,Old Colonists Women - Excel workbook,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/9f1775b6-9c4f-4e27-819b-33c83d0601f9/resource/ac6a6aff-f263-42b2-a20d-b0ec3a803ee0/download/old_colonists_women.xlsx,XLSX,This Excel workbook contains the same data as the CSV file but has the advantage that URLs are active hyperlinks.,2019-06-17T05:20:15.622877,2019-06-17T05:20:15.558765,,Creative Commons Attribution