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 838,State History Collection (features),History Trust of South Australia,History Trust of South Australia,2017-06-27T02:05:38.344832,2017-07-27T23:54:53.357526,"The History Trust of South Australia is responsible for the State History Collection, a collection of objects relevant to the history of South Australia. Strengths of this collection reflect the collecting areas of our three museums: the Migration Museum, the South Australian Maritime Museum and the National Motor Museum. This dataset is a small feature selection of around 200 museum objects from across the organisation and will grow as we continue our digitisation program. Please note that the license selected on this dataset it is not a blanket CC-BY-NC as there are some items that have different and possible more restrictive copyright. These license conditions are specified in the metadata under the Copyright, License and Usage Restrictions fields. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/a6457e37-6d36-4277-9318-dfe63ff28358,1836-01-01,1970-01-01,State History Collection,https://data.history.sa.gov.au/collection,API,"Instructions are provided in the primary URL An example of a basic implementation can be viewed at http://data.history.sa.gov.au/gallery.php?collection=collection&startindex=0 The example code can be downloaded from http://data.history.sa.gov.au/gallery.php.txt",2017-06-27T12:06:29.400254,,,Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 846,South Australian Museum - Australian Helminthological Collection,South Australian Museum,collectionsdata@samuseum.sa.gov.au,2013-05-25T04:34:09.962514,2022-03-21T01:24:16.064650,"The Australian Helminthological Collection (AHC) of the South Australian Museum includes approximately 42,000 registered lots of helminths (e.g. nematodes, tapeworms, and other parasitic flatworms). Most helminths in the collection are from Australian native vertebrates, but there is material from Australian domestic and zoo animals, livestock and humans and from hosts collected overseas. Many of the worms in this collection were donated by one of Australia’s most famous parasitologists and zoologists, Professor T. Harvey Johnston. Some of Johnston’s specimens were collected when he travelled to Antarctica as Chief Zoologist with Sir Douglas Mawson in 1929 as part of the British, Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expeditions. Material is either kept in bottles of ethanol or mounted on microscope slides. The AHC is used frequently by researchers and students, nationally and internationally, for taxonomic and biodiversity studies. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/f47e5aea-fbcc-49b8-b1b3-b48dca31ec79,1860,2022,Australian Helminthological Collection,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/f47e5aea-fbcc-49b8-b1b3-b48dca31ec79/resource/d4ec73f0-e4cb-4067-8cfd-7a7c1e9606f6/download/parasitology-export-report-2203211145.xlsx,XLSX,"The Australian Helminthological Collection (AHC) of the South Australian Museum includes approximately 42,000 registered lots of helminths (e.g. nematodes, tapeworms, and other parasitic flatworms). Most helminths in the collection are from Australian native vertebrates, but there is material from Australian domestic and zoo animals, livestock and humans and from hosts collected overseas. ",2013-05-24T23:35:19.676523,2022-03-21T01:24:16.042491,5035399.0,Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 847,South Australian Museum - Australian Helminthological Collection,South Australian Museum,collectionsdata@samuseum.sa.gov.au,2013-05-25T04:34:09.962514,2022-03-21T01:24:16.064650,"The Australian Helminthological Collection (AHC) of the South Australian Museum includes approximately 42,000 registered lots of helminths (e.g. nematodes, tapeworms, and other parasitic flatworms). Most helminths in the collection are from Australian native vertebrates, but there is material from Australian domestic and zoo animals, livestock and humans and from hosts collected overseas. Many of the worms in this collection were donated by one of Australia’s most famous parasitologists and zoologists, Professor T. Harvey Johnston. Some of Johnston’s specimens were collected when he travelled to Antarctica as Chief Zoologist with Sir Douglas Mawson in 1929 as part of the British, Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expeditions. Material is either kept in bottles of ethanol or mounted on microscope slides. The AHC is used frequently by researchers and students, nationally and internationally, for taxonomic and biodiversity studies. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/f47e5aea-fbcc-49b8-b1b3-b48dca31ec79,1860,2022,SA Museum Helminthological Collection - Metadata,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/storage/f/2013-05-25T04%3A36%3A18.902Z/metadata-tempate-helminthologicalcollection.doc,DOC,"The Australian Helminthological Collection (AHC) of the South Australian Museum includes approximately 42,000 registered lots of helminths (e.g. nematodes, tapeworms, and other parasitic flatworms). Most helminths in the collection are from Australian native vertebrates, but there is material from Australian domestic and zoo animals, livestock and humans and from hosts collected overseas. ",2013-05-24T23:38:23.803390,2014-10-30T09:00:55,851968.0,Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 848,South Australian Museum - Australian Helminthological Collection,South Australian Museum,collectionsdata@samuseum.sa.gov.au,2013-05-25T04:34:09.962514,2022-03-21T01:24:16.064650,"The Australian Helminthological Collection (AHC) of the South Australian Museum includes approximately 42,000 registered lots of helminths (e.g. nematodes, tapeworms, and other parasitic flatworms). Most helminths in the collection are from Australian native vertebrates, but there is material from Australian domestic and zoo animals, livestock and humans and from hosts collected overseas. Many of the worms in this collection were donated by one of Australia’s most famous parasitologists and zoologists, Professor T. Harvey Johnston. Some of Johnston’s specimens were collected when he travelled to Antarctica as Chief Zoologist with Sir Douglas Mawson in 1929 as part of the British, Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expeditions. Material is either kept in bottles of ethanol or mounted on microscope slides. The AHC is used frequently by researchers and students, nationally and internationally, for taxonomic and biodiversity studies. ",data.sa.gov.au,https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/f47e5aea-fbcc-49b8-b1b3-b48dca31ec79,1860,2022,Information about parasitology at the South Australian Museum,https://www.samuseum.sa.gov.au/collections/biological-sciences/parasites,HTML,"The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. In the future these data will be accessible online through the Atlas of Living Australia (www.ala.org.au). At present, the full dataset is published on data.sa.gov.au as a .csv file. ",2014-06-04T07:40:09.281280,,,Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 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 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 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 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 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