Jack Ashby
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jackdashby.bsky.social
Jack Ashby
@jackdashby.bsky.social
Award-winning author #PlatypusMatters & #NaturesMemory. Assistant Director of @ZoologyMuseum.bsky.social at Cambridge Uni. President of the Society for the History of Natural History. Australian mammal nerd. He/him. Own views.
Another day, another overstuffed #platypus 😍
Meet The #Fattypus of Salzburg.
November 18, 2025 at 7:54 AM
In #museums we get to help a lot of people with their work (our collections are here to be studied, and researchers are also often interested in the practices we develop) - it turns out I had 290 research visitors or enquiries in 24/25! 🤓
Here's a word cloud of what they were interested in:
November 17, 2025 at 3:57 PM
Climbing up above #Salzburg - through the low blanket of cloud and fog - brought rewards of stunning views, a spattering of snow, and a few chamois in their thick, dark winter coats. 🐐
#MammalWatching #WildAustria
November 17, 2025 at 8:05 AM
I've raided some of my #fieldguide shelves for a little consultancy project this weekend. 📚 It's a good excuse to look at books covering different parts of the world together (plus a first proper dive into @jimlabisko.bsky.social's GORGEOUS new #Frog book 🐸)
November 15, 2025 at 5:06 PM
Some people visit historic cabinets of curiosities for the sense of Enlightenment wonder, some for the exquisite displays of incredible specimens and artefacts. Me? It's all about the #CrapTaxidermy.
I'm guessing this little beauty is doing its best to be a leopard cat. St Peter's Abbey in #Salzburg
November 14, 2025 at 8:17 AM
Most people, particularly in Europe, don't imagine #wombats (or any Australian #mammals!) in the snow, so it's cool that the #wombat diorama at @nhmwien.bsky.social depicts a snowy habitat. Snow wombats are common in #Tasmania - like the live one above. #taxidermy
November 13, 2025 at 11:19 AM
Up in the Tasmanian highlands, a little #wombat grazes in the driving snow, braced against the wind.
#WombatWednesday #Tasmania #MammalWatching #wombats #WildOz
November 12, 2025 at 7:53 AM
Want to know more about how #echidnas got their European names? Here's part of that story from my book #PlatypusMatters: The Extraordinary Story of Australian Mammals (the bit about why we can't explain that echidnas appear to have been named after vipers is in the footnote).
November 11, 2025 at 4:53 PM
What does a snowflake moray eel have in common with an adorable egg-laying, anteating Australian mammal?
They are both #echidnas! The scientific name of the eel is #Echidna. Ékhidna means "viper" in Ancient Greek, which makes sense for a snake-shaped fish, but is more confusing for the mammal.
November 11, 2025 at 7:31 AM
The only other #taxidermy #thylacine in Austria is also posed to look non-threatening. This one in storage in @nhmwien.bsky.social is crouching in a diminutive or even curious pose. It came from a natural history dealer in Hamburg in 1870. Looking closely it appears to have been given a full pouch.
November 10, 2025 at 7:29 AM
Obviously it's sad when historic #taxidermy cracks, but it can show you how these specimens were converted from flat, treated skins to stand "alive" again. Here, the crack in this rhino at @nhmwien.bsky.social reveals an inner cage of willow beams. 🦏
November 6, 2025 at 6:12 PM
Only four #taxidermy bluebuck are known in #museums (Paris, Leiden, Stockholm, Vienna): the only large mammal species to become extinct in Africa in recent centuries. Bluebuck disappeared in ~1800.
(It feels weird to know I've seen them all - the only physical evidence of what bluebuck looked like)
November 5, 2025 at 2:20 PM
Excited to be at the Haus der Nature in Salzburg today, talking through some of my reflections on what natural history #museums have been up to for the last couple of centuries, and why that's important for how we think of them today.
November 5, 2025 at 8:12 AM
Spotted in Vienna!
At @nhmwien.bsky.social 🏛
November 4, 2025 at 5:34 PM
The largest ever turtle - 74-million-year-old Archelon - really was quite large. (@themuseumofliz.bsky.social for scale) 🐢
On display at @nhmwien.bsky.social
November 4, 2025 at 1:30 PM
Stellar's sea cows are fascinating for many reasons, not least because they were giant marine mammals that were first encountered by Europeans in 1741, & were driven to #extinction by 1768. I recently learnt they didn't have any finger bones (it's not just that they're missing from museum skeletons)
November 4, 2025 at 11:09 AM
Little and large.
I really like this display at @nhmwien.bsky.social showing the size difference between the biggest and smallest #mammals, with a single #whale vertebra alongside a tiny shrew.
November 4, 2025 at 10:16 AM
You don't often see a #taxidermy echidna that is actually shaped like a live #echidna.
✅️ Correctly backwards-pointing feet.
✅️ Belly correctly not flattened on the ground.
✅️ Smoothly graded neck.
@nhmwien.bsky.social
November 4, 2025 at 8:15 AM
Look at this absolute chunker of a #platypus (Schnabeltier in German = "beak-animal")!
#Fattypus
November 4, 2025 at 7:15 AM
An absolutely stunning #thylacine at @nhmwien.bsky.social, which hasn't been posed to convey the impression that #thylacines were dangerous or threatening in the way that so many other #taxidermy specimens do. That idea was central to the false claim that they threatened #Tasmania's sheep industry.
November 4, 2025 at 6:29 AM
I like the idea of museum specimens having "siblings", like casts of the same original #fossils that were sent to different #museums around the world. @themuseumofliz.bsky.social and I have been "collecting" siblings of the Iguanodon in Cambridge - here's one in @nhmwien.bsky.social in #Vienna. 🦖
November 3, 2025 at 4:31 PM
If you don't have space for a whole #mammoth, half a mammoth works just fine. 🦣
@nhmwien.bsky.social
November 3, 2025 at 3:57 PM
I FOUND THE FEMALE!
There is a single female specimen in this gallery at @nhmwien.bsky.social. For some groups of #mammals, males are almost always used as the representatives of their species in museum displays, and females rarely get a look in. It's one way that #taxidermy props up the #patriarchy
November 3, 2025 at 2:37 PM
Even though it's such a fundamental mammalian behaviour, it's rare to find #taxidermy posed suckling - presumably because of nineteenth-century prudishness. But here's some lovely #badgers at @nhmwien.bsky.social. 🦡🍼
November 3, 2025 at 1:49 PM
Some #taxidermy highlights from @nhmwien.bsky.social:
- aye-ayes are one of those animals that taxidermists usually do REALLY BADLY. But not this time!
- an absolute whopper of a walrus.
- some stunning big cats - that puma is gorgeous!
- a hooded seal, with its bonkers nose fully inflated.
November 3, 2025 at 1:03 PM