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Freckled Duck
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/freckled-duck/During the breeding season, the male Freckled Duck's bill becomes crimson at the base.
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Flame Robin
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/flame-robin/Flame Robins are the only robins to form flocks in winter.
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Emu
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/emu/The name 'emu' is not an Aboriginal word. It may have been derived from an Arabic word for large bird and later adopted by early Portuguese explorers and applied to cassowaries in eastern Indonesia. The term was then transferred to the Emu by early European explorers to Australia.
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Eastern Whipbird
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/eastern-whipbird/Black head and breast, white patch on side of face, olive-green with a long tail.
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Eastern Spinebill
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/eastern-spinebill/The Eastern Spinebill sometimes hovers like a hummingbird when feeding on the nectar from flowers. Most Australian honeyeaters feed on flowers from a perched position.
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Dollarbird
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/dollarbird/Dark brown body, blue-green wings and back, short orange red bill.
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Diamond Firetail
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/diamond-firetail/During courtship, the male Diamond Firetail holds a long piece of green grass in his bill, then flies to a branch where he sits near the female and begins to bob up and down. When she approaches, he twists his neck around and opens his bill just like young begging for food.
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Crimson Chat
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/crimson-chat/When a potential predator approaches the nest of a Crimson Chat, one or both parents will fake an injury on the ground in a distraction display to draw the predator away. It is also known as a 'rodent-run'.
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Eastern Shrike-tit
https://australian.museum/learn/animals/birds/eastern-shrike-tit/Eastern Shrike-tits may be heard tearing at the bark of trees, looking for insects to eat.
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Dinosaur - Qantassaurus intrepidus
https://australian.museum/learn/dinosaurs/fact-sheets/qantassaurus-intrepidus/Qantassaurus intrepidus, named after the Australian airline Qantas, was a small ornithopod from the Early Cretaceous of Victoria.
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Machu Picchu and the Golden Empires of Peru
Now open
Tickets on sale -
Tails from the Coasts
Special exhibition
Opening Saturday 10 May -
Wild Planet
Permanent exhibition
Open daily -
Minerals
Permanent exhibition
Open daily