Samling

Linnean Lens

Our regular online Linnean Lens events are an in-depth look at an item in our Collections. Featuring an expert, who tells us about the background of an item, before a member of our team gives a live showing of the item.

Händelser i denna samling

  • Linnean Lens | The Spoils of Botany: Carl Linnaeus’ Early Swedish Flora  primär bild

    Linnean Lens | The Spoils of Botany: Carl Linnaeus’ Early Swedish Flora

    Tue, Sep 9, 2:00 PM GMT+1

    Från $0.00

  • Linnean Lens | Treasures of the Linnean Shells collection  primär bild

    Linnean Lens | Treasures of the Linnean Shells collection

    Tue, Nov 4, 2:00 PM GMT

    Från $0.00

  • Linnean Lens | Robert Brown's Microscope  primär bild

    Linnean Lens | Robert Brown's Microscope

    Tue, Jan 13, 2:00 PM GMT

    Från $0.00

  • Linnean Lens | Linnaeus’s Pearls and the Freshwater Pearl Mussel  primär bild

    Linnean Lens | Linnaeus’s Pearls and the Freshwater Pearl Mussel

    Tue, Mar 3, 2:00 PM GMT

    Från $0.00

  • Science & Satire | The Remarkable Cartoons of Richard Owen  primär bild

    Science & Satire | The Remarkable Cartoons of Richard Owen

    Tue, Jul 8, 2:00 PM GMT+1

    Från $0.00

  • Linnean Lens | Linnaeus' Lapland Journey Diary (1732)  primär bild

    Linnean Lens | Linnaeus' Lapland Journey Diary (1732)

    Tue, May 6, 2:00 PM GMT+1

    Från $0.00

  • How to Conserve 18th and 19th Century Paper with Live Demo  primär bild

    How to Conserve 18th and 19th Century Paper with Live Demo

    Tue, Mar 4, 2:00 PM GMT

    Från $0.00

  • Linnean Lens | Leonhard Fuchs’s History of Plants (1542)  primär bild

    Linnean Lens | Leonhard Fuchs’s History of Plants (1542)

    Tue, Jan 14, 2:00 PM UTC

    Från $0.00

Delge

Arrangör av Linnean Lens
The Linnean Society of London is the world’s oldest active biological society. Founded in 1788, the Society takes its name from the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus (1707–1778) whose botanical, zoological and library collections have been in its keeping since 1829. As it moves into its third century the Society continues to play a central role in the documentation of the world’s flora and fauna – as Linnaeus himself did – recognising the continuing importance of such work to biodiversity conservation.Members are drawn from all walks of life, and represent the full range of professional scientists and amateurs alike with an interest in natural history. The Fellowship is international and includes world leaders in each branch of biology who use the Society's premises and publications to communicate new advances in their fields.