The Darwin Center at the Natural History Museum

by Patricia Herbig

A man looks at a specimen in a glass cube at the Darwin Center at the Natural History Museum in London.The Darwin Centre was built as an adjunct to the Natural History Museum to house and give access to the 22 million specimens collected and received by the NHM. Although it is part of the museum, the Darwin Centre’s main focus is research (when we were there last week, scientists were completing a 3 year study of the effects on marine life in the Gulf after the first Gulf War).

A researcher gives a tour to visitors in white lab coats at the Darwin Center at the Natural History Museum in London.It is imperative to book a tour. It is possible to do this on-site and maybe get a tour later in the day, but this will be more difficult to do during public and school holidays. Tours last about 30 minutes and are guided by a member of the research staff. You will be asked to store in a locked locker any bags or lose articles of clothing and will be given a lab coat to wear. The guides are knowledgeable and willing to answer questions.

Visitors examine preserved specimens along a public corridor at the Darwin Center, London.There are 27 kilometres of shelves ranged over 6 floors in the Darwin Centre as well as a large number of large metal storage containers in the basement. The specimens come from as long ago as the 1750s right up to today. All are stored in glass jars that need to be topped up regularly with alcohol to ensure their continued existence. You will not, of course, see them all; the guides pick an area and show some specimens from that section.

Specimen jars with handwritten labels from the Darwin Center at the Natural History Museum in London.While children tend to be the ones we think of when we go to museums of this kind, I found it at least as interesting as my children did. The Darwin Centre has plans to extend the facilities by 2008 and add another building which will house their insects and larger mammals.

To book a tour, call: 020-7942-6128. Tours are given M-Sa, 10.00 – 17.30, Su 11.00 – 17.30 and are free. For additional information: www.nhm.ac.uk/darwincentre

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