
Museums and archives re-examine historical collections, yielding new discoveries and indigenous collaborations
A misidentified Antarctic fossil, a Swedish museum's engagement with Jirrbal women, and a major Canberra exhibition signal a shift in how institutions interrogate their holdings and exploration legacies.
A fossil collected on the Antarctic Peninsula in 1985 and stored for nearly four decades has been identified as a titanosaur tail bone, the first dinosaur fossil confirmed from the continent. The specimen, held by the British Antarctic Survey in Cambridge, was originally catalogued as a large marine reptile. Re-examination by palaeontologists from the Natural History Museum and BAS, published in Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, determined it belonged to a plant-eating sauropod roughly seven metres long that lived about 82 million years ago. Researchers in London note the find adds a data point to the sparse record of Antarctic dinosaurs, whose remains are largely entombed under ice sheets.
This re-evaluation of a long-held collection mirrors a broader institutional trend. At Stockholm’s Ethnographic Museum, three women from the Jirrbal people of north-eastern Australia are working with curators to study objects taken by Swedish zoologist Eric Mjöberg during a 1910s expedition. The collaboration, part of preparations for a new permanent exhibition on Sweden’s colonial history opening in December, has surfaced mixed responses: the items, some likely stolen, are preserved in rare condition, offering a tangible link to lost craft knowledge and the endangered Jirrbal language. Viewed from Stockholm, the project represents a deliberate effort to shift curatorial authority toward source communities.
In Washington, the newly opened National Geographic Museum of Exploration, a 100,000-square-foot institution near the White House, similarly foregrounds immersive, participatory displays over static artefacts. Its galleries feature expedition equipment, a 270-degree theatre, and a digital archive of the magazine’s covers, aiming to cast visitors as explorers. Meanwhile, the National Museum of Australia in Canberra has mounted an exhibition of more than 200 objects from the National Antarctic Heritage Collection, including oversnow vehicles, a 1912 sled, and personal diaries, most displayed for the first time. Curators there describe it as one of the world’s most significant Antarctic collections, highlighting the human effort behind Australia’s polar programme.
These initiatives share a common mechanism: the re-opening of archives, whether geological, ethnographic, or historical, is generating new knowledge and reshaping narratives. The Antarctic fossil identification relied on a field notebook entry from geologist Mike Thomson, who died in 2020; the Swedish museum’s work draws on Mjöberg’s personal archive, recently transferred from a Californian institution. The next milestone to watch is the December opening of the Ethnographic Museum’s colonial history exhibition, which will test how such collaborative re-examinations are presented to the public.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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European ethnographic museums are confronting their colonial past with a mix of unease and pragmatism. A new exhibition in Stockholm, developed with Australian Indigenous representatives, aims to shed light on controversial collections amassed during the colonial era. The initiative reveals how complex and painful the decolonisation of cultural institutions can be.
Antarctica is celebrated as a heritage of exploration and human endurance, with one of the greatest collections ever displayed in Australia. The exhibition highlights over a century of Antarctic endeavours, presenting hundreds of artefacts to the public for the first time. The emphasis is on collective effort and scientific legacy, with no mention of colonial controversies.
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