data

Custom SQL query returning 74 rows (hide)

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rowiddataset_titlepublisherauthordataset_issueddataset_modifieddataset_descriptionsourceinfo_urlstart_dateend_datefile_titledownload_urlformatfile_descriptionfile_createdfile_modifiedfile_sizelicence
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
865 South Australian Museum Arachnology Collection South Australian Museum South Australian Museum 2016-06-24T05:00:45.749753 2020-02-18T01:13:20.998657 The Arachnology Collection at the South Australian Museum contains around 300,000 arachnids as well as many centipedes and millipedes (Myriapoda). Of these around 56,000 have been databased. Spider specimens make up the largest component, with some 200,000 specimens stored in alcohol. The Sparassidae (huntsman spiders) are particularly well represented in the collection with over 2000 Australasian specimens. The collection also houses a significant mite (Acarina) collection (about 45,000 specimens) in alcohol or on glass microscope slides, approximately 5000 scorpion (Scorpiones) specimens and a smaller number of Myriapoda specimens (about 3600). The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. The ALA also has a fully documented [API](http://api.ala.org.au/) Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. data.sa.gov.au https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/6812c858-5ff1-4188-9997-befffbc42dbe 1880-01-01 2016-01-01 South Australian Museum Arachnology collection on the Atlas of Living Australia https://collections.ala.org.au/public/show/co202 Mixed Formats The Atlas of Living Australia page for the South Australian Museum Arachnology collection. As an alternative to downloading the entire dataset the ALA also provides [an API](http://api.ala.org.au/) 2016-06-24T15:02:39.155583     Creative Commons Attribution
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
908 South Australian Museum Marine Invertebrates collection South Australian Museum South Australian Museum 2016-07-05T03:33:27.070432 2017-05-08T02:34:29.724267 The Marine invertebrates collection is currently represented by 23 phyla and holds more than one million specimen lots including 1,700 holotypes, 11,300 secondary types, 33,000 registered lots and 1,400 microscope slide preparations. Specimens include molluscs, crustaceans, worms, sponges, jellyfish, corals and sea anemones, sea stars and sea urchins. Of these specimens about 5,500 have been databased and are accessible through the Atlas of Living Australia, more than 1500 of them with digital images of the specimen and label. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. The ALA also has a fully documented [API](http://api.ala.org.au/) The Museum has also been using the ALA's Online Volunteer Digitisation Portal, [DIGIVOL](https://volunteer.ala.org.au/) to digitise the data for Marine Invertebrate specimens. To facilitate this a large quantity of specimens have been imaged. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. data.sa.gov.au https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c82dc4f6-85d7-4999-b5d5-6eeb97dfef85 1880-01-01 2016-01-01 South Australian Museum Marine Invertebrates Collection https://biocache.ala.org.au/occurrences/search?q=collection_uid:co165 HTML The South Australian Museum Marine Invertebrates Collection data available through the Atlas of Living Australia 2016-07-05T13:34:15.892177     Creative Commons Attribution
909 South Australian Museum Marine Invertebrates collection South Australian Museum South Australian Museum 2016-07-05T03:33:27.070432 2017-05-08T02:34:29.724267 The Marine invertebrates collection is currently represented by 23 phyla and holds more than one million specimen lots including 1,700 holotypes, 11,300 secondary types, 33,000 registered lots and 1,400 microscope slide preparations. Specimens include molluscs, crustaceans, worms, sponges, jellyfish, corals and sea anemones, sea stars and sea urchins. Of these specimens about 5,500 have been databased and are accessible through the Atlas of Living Australia, more than 1500 of them with digital images of the specimen and label. The SA Museum manages this dataset using the KE EMu collection management system. It is interpreted into the [Darwin Core](http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/index.htm) metadata schema (DwC) and semi-regularly exported to the [Atlas of Living Australia](http://www.ala.org.au/) (ALA) and the [Online Zoological Collections of Australian Museums](http://www.ozcam.org.au/) (OZCAM). Data sourced from Australian museums on both the ALA and OZCAM should be identical, but on ALA they are combined with observational data from citizen science initiatives and other sources. Both of those sites make it possible to combine, interrogate and analyse data through web services such as the [Spatial Analysis Portal](http://spatial.ala.org.au/). In the Spatial Portal ALA data can be combined with meteorological and other environmental data sourced from and made accessible by relevant government agencies. The ALA also has a fully documented [API](http://api.ala.org.au/) The Museum has also been using the ALA's Online Volunteer Digitisation Portal, [DIGIVOL](https://volunteer.ala.org.au/) to digitise the data for Marine Invertebrate specimens. To facilitate this a large quantity of specimens have been imaged. Data about endangered species are either withheld from online publication, or coordinates or other data are obscured on the ALA and OZCAM. In those circumstances more specific information is available directly from SA Museum collection managers if it is genuinely required for research purposes. SA Museum data can be downloaded in full from the Atlas of Living Australia, or broken down into discipline specific parts (e.g. Herpetology, Mammalogy etc). On download the ALA will request an email address (not mandatory) and a reason for download (mandatory) – this is required to track usage of the ALA data to help data providers determine priorities for upload and improvement. data.sa.gov.au https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/c82dc4f6-85d7-4999-b5d5-6eeb97dfef85 1880-01-01 2016-01-01 Specimen images from the South Australian Museum Marine Invertebrates collection https://biocache.ala.org.au/occurrences/search?q=collection_uid%3Aco165&fq=multimedia%3A%22Image%22#tab_recordImages HTML The records from the South Australian Museum Marine Invertebrates collection which are accompanied by images. 2016-07-05T13:35:25.650675     Creative Commons Attribution
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
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
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
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
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
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
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