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A security review was held at the service's ten museums, leading to an extension of CCTV coverage and alarm systems in some of the museums. [2] The years of 2017-18 brought record visitor numbers for the service, with 426,110 people visiting NMS museums between April 2017 and March 2018, accounting for a 9% rise.
A more major three-month excavation by the Norfolk Archaeological Unit followed in 1995. [2] Funding from the Heritage lottery Fund and from Anglian Water was gained by Norfolk Museums Service. Details of animal remains, other fossils, stratigraphy, mineralogy and chemistry were mapped and recorded. During the excavations almost ten tonnes of ...
January 14, 2025 – National Dress Up Your Pet Day began in 2009 and is a great day to let your pooch or feline friend find their inner fashion diva.. January 20, 2025 – Penguin Awareness Day ...
Blue Hills Trailside Museum: Milton: Norfolk: Greater Boston: Nature center: Operated by the Massachusetts Audubon Society, natural history of the Blue Hills Reservation, live animals, programs Boardman House: Saugus: Essex: North Shore: Historic house: Owned by Historic New England, open two days a year, late 17th-century saltbox Boylston ...
This list of museums in Norfolk, England contains museums which are defined for this context as institutions (including nonprofit organizations, government entities, and private businesses) that collect and care for objects of cultural, artistic, scientific, or historical interest and make their collections or related exhibits available for public viewing.
The Norfolk Animal Care Center is offering pet adoption for $35 until the end of the month to make more space for animals in need of care. Typically, pet adoption cost $75 at the shelter.
Hermitage Foundation Museum and Gardens: Norfolk: Norfolk: Tidewater/Hampton Roads: Multiple: website, early 20th-century historic house museum with an art collection and contemporary exhibition galleries, surrounded by twelve acres of formal gardens and natural woodlands, educational wetlands, a visual arts school and a studio artists program
In 1892, the City of Norfolk purchased the 65 acres (26 ha) that was currently occupied by Lafayette Park. In 1900, the park began acquiring animals to exhibit, and by 1901 its collection exceeded 200 animals, including mammals, birds and reptiles. [1] In 1974, the facility was fenced off from the city park, and renamed Lafayette Zoological Park.