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We’re asking Australians to choose objects from the places they love, and tell stories about the changes happening there. Here are their stories about living in the Anthropocene.

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  • All
  • action
  • art
  • beach
  • biodiversity
  • building
  • bushfire
  • care
  • climate change
  • coal
  • community
  • deep time
  • deforestation
  • design
  • drought
  • erosion
  • experimental
  • extraction
  • farming
  • fish
  • food
  • fossil fuels
  • fungi
  • future fossil
  • gardening gloves
  • geology
  • Great Barrier Reef
  • habitat
  • homes
  • land clearing
  • marine waste
  • mining
  • native vegetation
  • nature reserve
  • ocean
  • plastic
  • pollution
  • protection
  • recycling
  • red gum
  • regeneration
  • rivers
  • sea levels
  • soil erosion
  • solar energy
  • sound
  • species loss
  • strata
  • sunscreen
  • technology
  • thongs
  • timber
  • urban
  • waste
  • waterways
  • wildflowers

CO(R)AL artwork

Iwata

Biography of an iceberg

Ambergris

Signs of Nature

A silent sentinel in a city park

Tiny fish, big problems

Big hunks of stone always make me smile

Goolarabooloo Foreign Policy: The Garbina and the Order of Australia Medal

Survival: Rotary Park Style

Scorched tooth from a Weedy Sea-Dragon Ogoh-Ogoh

Stories for a changing climate

Geolocator brooch

Griffith Island

Caring for our planet: 'never let it rest'

Mudstone and memory

The Bird Bath in the Buffer Zone

Frank Hurley and the Great Barrier Reef

The Thylacine Buggy Rug

Heard Island empty fabric softener bottle

Memories of a mining state

An encounter with brine shrimp and deep time

Gaia, the firefighting Boeing 737

Sun Smart

Do Stones Have History?

Ancient Red Gum

Opercula

Across the Paddock and into the Distance

The Phasmid who befriended my son

Theodore Roosevelt's bon bon dish

A tool for creation or destruction?

The Super Pit

Drawing to make a difference

Raising a green wood shed

A loupe and a forgotten kingdom

Plastic in the pacific

A leaky weir and regenerative farming

Coconut fibre twine

Thongs (flip-flops)

Changing the land one courtyard at a time

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National Museum of Australia
Lawson Crescent
Acton Peninsula, Canberra

Freecall: 1800 026 132

ABN: 70 592 297 967