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The museums of a local, national and supranational hero: Hugh Miller's collections over the decades
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The appeal circular for the purchase of Hugh Miller's collection, 1858
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Ichthyosaurs from the Lower Lias (Lower Jurassic) of Banwell, Somerset
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A memoir of Hugh Miller (1802–1856) attributed to his son Hugh Miller FGS (1850–1896)
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An integrated approach to understanding the role of the long neck in plesiosaurs
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Tennyson and the geologists part 2: saurians and the Isle of Wight
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A lost ichthyosaur from the Lower Lias figured in William Buckland’s Bridgewater Treatise of 1836, and possibly owned by the Geological Society of London or Viscount Cole F.G.S., later Earl of Enniskillen (1807-1886)
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19th century plaster casts of Lower Jurassic ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs in the Bristol Institution for the Advancement of Science, Literature and the Arts, and the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia.
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The Reverend David Williams F.G.S. (1792-1850) of Bleadon, and his collection of ichthyosaurs and a plesiosaur from the Lower Lias of Somerset
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Henry Ball (c. 1783-?1856), fossil collector of Watchet, Somerset, and the forced sale of his collection in 1841 to Robert H.W. Bartlett (c. 1814-1887)
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