The Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences The Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences

Research

The Museum is responsible for around 1.5 million fossil, rock and mineral specimens from around the world, encompassing more than 500 million years of Earth's history.

The Museum's reserve palaeontology store is being upgraded and will need to be closed while work takes place. The reserve palaeontology collections will not be accessible during the closure; access to the main palaeontology collections will remain unaffected. It is estimated that that the reserve store will be closed March to December 2007 inclusive. Access to the mineral store will be maintained, but there may be some periods of disruption.

Palaeontology Collections

Curator: Dr Liz Harper

Collections Manager: Dan Pemberton

Collections Assistant, Palaeontology: Mathew Riley

To learn more about the palaeontology collections, please contact Mathew Riley.

Mineralogy and Petrology Collections

Curator: Professor Michael Carpenter

Collections Manager: Dan Pemberton

Collections Assistant, Mineralogy and Petrology: Mr Steve Laurie

To learn more about the Mineralogy and Petrology collections, please contact Steve Laurie.

Conservation Facility

Conservation Unit

The Geological Conservation Unit was founded in 1991 as the conservation unit for collections of the Sedgwick Museum and the Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge. The Unit has a fully equipped laboratory where we do conservation work and prepare objects for display.

The specimens on display in the gallery are just a fraction of the entire collection. Most of the Museum's specimens are stored in environmentally controlled rooms at the Conservation Unit.


Research Activities

Dinosaur acquisition

Work on Scelidosaurus, a very early armoured dinosaur collected from the Lower Jurassic of Dorset has produced several preliminary papers (Norman, 2001). Grants from the PRISM Fund (Preservation of Industrial and Scientific Material) and Trinity College, Cambridge have allowed the Sedgwick Museum to purchase a very important partial skeleton of this animal; this will support the research effort and eventually form the focus of a new display.

Mepal Crocodile and Ichthyosaur

The site at Mepal

Important fossilised remains were discovered in the Cambridgeshire fens at Mepal, near Ely during 2001. The find consisted of the fragmentary remains of a crocodile (an incomplete mandible preliminarily identified as Steneosaurus sp.) and the considerable remains of an ichthyosaur ( Brachypterygius sp.), including much of the skull and mandible, teeth, shoulder girdle and ribs. The remains were discovered by two local amateur collectors, Ed Mallett and Serena Queenie, who notified the Museum and helped us to recover the bones. THe fossils were kindly donated to the Sedgwick Museum by OceanFresh (UK) Ltd, the owners and developers of the land at Mepal.

Collection from the site included the production of site ground-plans, careful numbering of the elements, photographs, environmental data, and a sedimentary core.

>> View the poster (PDF, 0.8MB) about this discovery (presented at the 51st 'Symposium of Vertebrate Palaeontology and Comparative Anatomy' (SVPCA), and the 12th 'Symposium of Paleontological Preparation and Conservation' (SPPC) held consecutively at the Oxford University Museum between 15th and 19th September 2003).

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