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Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Guanare; Museo de Historia Natural La Salle, Caracas; Museo de la Estación Biológica de Rancho Grande [62] [63] Museo del Instituto de Zoología Agrícola 'Francisco Fernández, Aragua; Museo Marino, Boca de Río; Museo Oceanologico Hermano Benigno Roman de la Fundación La Salle, Punta de Piedras, Isla Margarita
The Chilean National Museum of Natural History (Spanish: Museo Nacional de Historia Natural or MNHN) is one of three national museums in Chile, along with the Museum of Fine Arts and the National History Museum. It is located in Quinta Normal Park, and was founded in 1830 by the French naturalist Claudio Gay.
The National Museum of Natural History (Spanish: Museo Nacional de Historia Natural or MNHN) in Montevideo is a natural history museum in Uruguay. It opened in 1838, and is the oldest scientific institution in Uruguay and one of the oldest natural history collections in the world.
Museo Nacional de Antropología (National Museum of Anthropology) Museo Nacional de Historia (National Museum of History) Museo Nacional de Arte (National Museum of Art) Museo Nacional de las Culturas (National Museum of Cultures) Museo Nacional de las Intervenciones (National Museum of the Interventions)
Museo de Arte Contemporáneo [12] Museo de Historia del Arte y de Arte Precolombino y Colonial (MuHAr) [13] Museo de Arte Precolombino e Indígena (Mapi) [14] Museo Nacional de Artes Visuales; Museo Juan Manuel Blanes; Museo del Azulejo [15] [16] Museo Egipcio [17] Museo Figari [18] Museo Gurvich [19] [20] Museo Joaquín Torres García
Boletín del Museo Nacional de Historia Natural (in Spanish). 27: 3– 7. Mostny, G. (1957). "La Momia del Cerro El Plomo, Estado de conservación del conjunto arqueológico" [The Mummy of Cerro El Plomo, State of conservation of the archaeological site]. Boletín del Museo Nacional de Historia Natural (in Spanish). 27: 9– 13.
The Museo Cubana de Ciencias Naturales existed from 1959 to 1961, and became El Museo de Ciencias 'Felipe Poey' in 1962-1980, named for Cuban zoologist Felipe Poey (1799-1891). The exhibitions were open to the public for the first time in 1964-1980.
L. fabiani is endemic to the Salar de Atacama, the Atacama salt flat, in northern Chile. [5]The species was first described by José L. Yáñez and Herman Núñez in 1983, from a sample collected at a high elevation, 2,450 m (8,040 ft), near San Pedro de Atacama in Llano de Vilama in September 1981 by the Chilean National Museum of Natural History.