The Museum is home to 70 million specimens. Who has access to them, and what does the future hold for this impressive data source?
The Museum owes its beginnings to Sir Hans Sloane, an 18th century collector. He acquired over 80,000 items, forming the single largest collection of any individual in Europe.
The Museum's collections serve many purposes, from educating and inspiring visitors to solving problems in agricultural, medical and forensic science.
Once specimens arrive at the Museum, they need to be prepared and labelled by curators. But the majority of a curator's time is spent maintaining and documenting existing collections.
As the Museum's collections continue to grow, it is necessary to improve and expand our storage facilities.
The Wallace Collection brings together a remarkable selection of digitised letters, notes, articles and insect specimens collected by Wallace himself.
Search our database covering the wide range of collections held at the Museum, including fish, fossils and flowers.
How does the Museum organise, preserve and conserve its 60 million life science specimens?
Find out what the Museum's collections reveal about the links between slavery and the natural world.
Every Museum scientist has a favourite specimen from our 70-million-strong collection. Join us to delve into mammal curator, Richard Sabin's top three.
With responsibility for a quarter of a million sponge specimens, what are Clare Valentine’s favourites of the Museum’s collections?
How was it that Mammal Curator Andy Current bonded with the skull of an extinct giant ground sloth?
Zoologist Miranda Lowe introduces us to a giant relative of the woodlouse, the largest land crab and an alien crab invading the Thames.
Find out which three of the Museum’s 70 million specimens fish curator Ollie Crimmen finds particularly fascinating.
Where can you find a major art display in the Museum that's rarely noticed? It's on the ceiling. Join us to learn more.
Find out why the Museum specimens that mean the most to Norman Macleod represent the history of how he came to be a palaeontologist.
Until 1938 whale carcasses were buried in the Museum grounds so that their flesh would decay leaving only the skeletons.