The University of Florida, Florida Museum of Natural History (UF-FLMNH) Herpetology collection dates back to 1862. Our collection is world-wide in scope, and at > 287,000 specimens/specimen lots it is ranked #1 largest in the southeastern United States and #8 largest in North America. The Florid
data, will not be incorporated in its raw form in any publicly available database (e.g., web site, compact
https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/science/not-a-pot-to-cook-in/
Irving Rouse, the doyen of Caribbean archaeology, once estimated that pottery comprised 90% of all artifacts found in the region. It should come as no surprise then that the precontact history of the islands is written as if broken pieces of pottery (called sherds[1]) – not people – were the main ac
The main activity was the manufacture of shell disc beads from the cherry jewel box shell (Chama sarda
https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/iz/resources/florida-snails/
How to Use this Key: Start with the first question. Decide whether the statement in the first box (1a) or the second box (1b) best describes the characteristics of the snail you are trying to identify. Click on the link in the row that best matches your snail. Your choice will lead you to th
Spire short and compact, about 0.5-0.7 times height of aperture in mature specimens, proportionally longer
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