Natural Science Museum Flensburg

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Coordinates: 54 ° 47 ′ 8.6 "  N , 9 ° 25 ′ 53.7"  E

Logo of the Natural Science Museum Flensburg
The Heinrich Sauermann House on the Museumsberg in Flensburg. The Natural Science Museum is on the ground floor.

The Natural Science Museum Flensburg is a natural history museum on the Museumsberg Flensburg on the ground floor of the Heinrich Sauermann House. The museum is a cultural institute of the city of Flensburg and, like the Museumsberg and the Maritime Museum, is one of the city museums. The Ice Age House is part of the Natural Science Museum as a geological-paleontological show magazine. One of the main tasks is to impart knowledge about the development and settlement of the landscape in the region of northern Schleswig-Holstein - southern Denmark (region Sønderjylland ) as well as about the fauna and flora in this region, depending on the natural and anthropogenic factors. Particularly noteworthy are its historically valuable collections.

The Natural Science Museum Flensburg is listed in the central register of biological research collections in Germany.

The creation of the museum

history

Hans Philippsen published several books and articles on natural history topics in Northern Germany.

The museum emerged from the collections and local history research carried out by citizens of Flensburg and the surrounding area. Its history begins in 1913, when the city of Flensburg bought a geological collection from Flensburg teacher Hans Philippsen (* October 3, 1866, † January 24, 1926). It was exhibited in the drawing room of the forest school and looked after by Philippsen himself on a voluntary basis.

Additional collections (mussels, beetles, snails and prehistoric finds) were bought and endowed by 1924. In November 1924, Lord Mayor Hermann Bendix Todsen opened the expanded collection as the “Geological Home Collection” on the upper floor of the forest school. In October 1925 the name was changed to "Natural History Museum". Up until 1929 additions were made to the bird collection. Due to the limited space, only parts of the collections were accessible to visitors. In December 1936, the Nazi city administration ordered the collections to be housed in the great hall and in two side rooms of the house of the Masonic Lodge . Applying Nazi laws, the city had previously withdrawn the lodge building. Lord Mayor Ernst Kracht opened the exhibition there. Soon afterwards the museum closed due to the war.

In 1946 the Masonic Lodge got the building back. Part of the collection could remain in the lodge house. Other parts were deposited in the attic rooms of the Nikolaischule, today's Hans-Christiansen-Haus on the Museumsberg.

On October 30, 1962, City President Carl Jensen celebrated the reopening, now in the originally u. a. Rooms of the new city ​​library that are intended as garages . Furthermore, external storage rooms remained necessary to accommodate collection material, initially in the Deutsches Haus , later in a garage and storage room of a Flensburg merchant on Marienstraße. All rooms were unsatisfactory from a conservation point of view.

Another move resulted in an improvement in the room situation. It was made necessary by the expansion of the city library at the Süderhofenden location. With its exhibition, magazine, library, work and administration area, the museum moved to the renovated rooms on the ground floor of the Heinrich-Sauermann-Haus on the Museumsberg and was opened there by Mayor Hermann Stell on November 10, 2001 as a "Natural Science Museum" .

The geological-paleontological-archaeological collections had previously been transported to a historic building in Christiansenpark , which meant that the unfavorable location on Marienstraße could be abandoned. The show magazine was opened by Mayor Hermann Stell on August 2nd, 2002. It has been open as an Ice Age house (167 m² exhibition space) since April 2006 two days a week and is looked after by volunteers. In keeping with its name, information is provided on the ice ages in northern Germany and northern Europe, on the landscape forms they created, and on debris and fossils that were transported to the Flensburg area by glaciers. The museum and the Ice Age house are about 400 m from each other.

The Ice Age House is the geological-paleontological show magazine of the Natural Science Museum.

On July 4, 2010, the Heinrich Sauermann House and thus the Natural Science Museum were closed for renovation measures in favor of fire protection and energy-efficient renovation . Since spring 2012 it can be visited again.

Chronicle of the museum directors, carers and educators

Museum director:

year Title, name function
1913-1926 Vice-Rector Hans Philippsen Honorary director of the collection and later the museum
1926-1927 Teacher Hans Reese honorary director of the museum
1927-1973 University professor Walther Emeis honorary director of the museum
1973-1981 University professor Eberhard Schmidt honorary director of the museum
1981-1993 University professor Willfried Janßen honorary director of the museum
1993-1995 W. Janßen with Meinolf Hammerschmidt (1991–1994, different employment relationships) with supervisory a. Cleaner Gerda Leegel Interim management
since 1995 Werner Barkemeyer first full-time museum director

Museum curator:

year Title, name function
1958-1982 Alfred Zachau Museum curator
1982-1993 Axel Elsner-Siegfried Museum curator

Museum educators:

year Title, name job
1975-1988 Claus Clausen Secondary school teacher
1988-1992 Hans-Christian Johannsen Secondary school teacher
1987-1993 Edmund Link Secondary school teacher
since 1995 Werner Barkemeyer (and honorary employees) biologist
1987-1993 diverse people ABM forces

Swell: ,

Voluntary commitment and support association

In addition to the 32.4-hour post of the museum director financed by the culture budget of the city of Flensburg and the proportionate employment of other municipal employees (from 5% restorer and carpenter to 50% supervisor), two groups support the operation of the museum: Some of the 14 volunteer employees ( Status: January 2012) look after the “Eiszeit-Haus” show magazine during opening hours. In addition, they offer help with the determination of fossils , stones and minerals during the "fossil consultation hours" in the Ice Age house. They also organize special exhibitions. The association “Friends and Sponsors of the Natural Science Museum Flensburg” currently (January 2012) has 62 members. About the association z. B. supports cultural and educational activities of the museum and grants from third parties for the implementation of special exhibitions etc. the like.

Collections

The quantitatively and qualitatively outstanding collections of the Natural Science Museum are a unique archive of material objects of scientific and cultural-historical importance for the region. The oldest elements of the collection date from the 19th century.

The museum's collections include the scientific study collection, the museum library, the image and document archive, and the museum-educational document and teaching collection. The collections are supplemented by diary entries and archive material with details on the origin of the objects and the biography of the collector. They enable insights into ecological and cultural relationships at the time the collections were created. In addition, especially in the Ice Age House, there are permanent loans from private collectors.

Most of the scientific collections come from northern Schleswig-Holstein and southern Denmark (belonged to the German Empire until 1920 ). In order to enable contextual comparisons, objects from neighboring areas are integrated into the collections. These include Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Lower Saxony, Scandinavia ( geology , biology ) and the Baltic States (geology).

Animal collections

Bird species in forest and park
Harvest mice (Micromys minutus) on the summer nest

The biological collections of insect , bird and mammal fauna are housed on the 3rd floor of the Heinrich Sauermann House and are accessible to visitors there upon request.

The insect magazine essentially contains dry material in over six hundred insect boxes. The heavyweights in terms of content are the collections of butterflies , hymenoptera and flies .

Butterfly specimens represent the core of the insectology collection. The oldest specimens were collected towards the end of the 19th century. The material is made up of the bequests of various local researchers such as Emeis, Hansen, Julius Lichtwerk (* September 18, 1890, † July 8, 1963), Paulsen and Schadewaldt. These specimen copies are indicators of the condition of the biotopes in the past. Today they also offer an excellent basis for comparison for genetic examinations for the reintroduction of regionally extinct animal populations, such as those carried out by the Schleswig-Holstein Nature Conservation Foundation . More recently butterfly collections have been acquired from Denmark (local collections Denmark and Scandinavia, Hendriksen collection and Cardel collection) and from northern Germany (Schnering collection and Brandt collection).

The Hymenoptera collection comes mainly from Walther Emeis (* May 10, 1891 - May 28, 1973), who examined bees , bumblebees and wasps from Schleswig-Holstein in particular and thus achieved international recognition. The two-winged documents were mainly collected by Emeis and, more recently, by Claus Claußen (Flensburg) and Werner Barkemeyer. The ant collection of Emeis and other collectors was revised from 2009 to 2011 by Uwe Sörensen (Niebüll).

A valuable addition to the collection resulted from the takeover of the Zehrwesp collection from Karl Otto Meyer (Oldenburg / O.) In 2002, with numerous finds from Northern Germany .

The collections of beetles and bedbugs are of comparatively minor importance . The collection of dragonflies with many old finds was started in mid-February 2012 for an overview of the state's dragonfly fauna.

The bird collection includes over 900 stuffing preparations. Many of them date from the first half of the 20th century and are of varying quality and origin. In addition to preparations made on behalf of the museum, many come from estates, such as those of the former caretaker in the German House and amateur taxidermist Otto Beyreis, Flensburg. The bird collection of the museum also includes a specimen of the Noddise Tern (Brauner Noddy, Anous stolidus pileatus), which was shot near Husum around 1912, and which came to the Paulus Paulsen collection after preparation. It is the first record of this bird species in Europe .

The irreplaceable egg collection (approx. 500 items) with many rarities from the region is based on the collection of the Flensburg teacher and special educator Paulus Paulsen (born January 26, 1849; † March 12, 1946). It contains, for example, an egg from a short-toed eagle that attempted to breed near Flensburg in 1882 (Emeis 1926). A school in Flensburg was named after Paulus Paulsen.

The museum's comparatively small mammal collection comprises around 100 exhibited specimens. Among them are some faunistic rarities such as an otter from Flensburg.

The basic structure of the mussel and snail collection , stored in the exhibition area, is the legacy of Hans Philippsen (born October 3, 1866; † January 24, 1926) and Hans Plamböck.

Plant collections

The plant collections consist of various herbaria , mainly from the local area. They were brought together by the collectors Brandt, Emeis, Hans Möller and others. The oldest pieces come from the well-known Husby botanist , sexton and teacher Lars Hansen (* September 12, 1788; † August 14, 1876).

The moss and lichen collection by Walter Saxen (born June 19, 1893 - August 11, 1964), which came to the museum together with other parts of his estate, is of outstanding importance . The excellently preserved and documented objects are of immense value in terms of regional research. This also applies to the lichens that were collected by Christian Friedo Eckhard Erichsen (* October 18, 1867; † July 25, 1945).

Geological collections

The geological collections was the starting point for the development of the museum. It has grown steadily since then and is mainly located in the Ice Age House. The majority of the objects come from the Flensburg area including the adjacent Danish area.

The fossils were mainly from the Flensburgers Emeis, Carl Loewe (??), ?? Paulsen (??), Hans Philippsen and Alfred Zachau (born March 26, 1917 - † February 9, 2004) and, more recently, by Rolf Bertling (rear guard), Helmut Köller (Kiel), Helmut Meier (Schuby, born July 16 1924 - † September 11, 2004) and Ulrich Meisinger (Flensburg). Axel Paulsen (Altenholz-Stift), Wolfgang Bilz (Eckernförde) and Holger Tüxen (Schiöl) have made other outstanding finds from the region available on loan.

The crystalline collection goes back to Emeis, Philippsen and Zachau and (after 2000) to Mrs. Renate Jeske (Rendsburg), Raymond Perry (Frörup) and Hildegard Wilske (Flensburg).

Archaeological collections

The study collection also includes artifacts that go back to various collections in Flensburg and the surrounding area. These include the collection of Stone Age objects by H. Philippsen and a large number of finds from the Flensburg harbor area. They are already mentioned in the work of Flensburg secondary school rector Jakob Röschmann (* July 20, 1899, † March 19, 1963).

The archaeological collection is currently not being expanded with collections initiated by the museum itself or by the museum. Artifacts are exceptionally accepted if they complement the existing collection in a justifiable manner. Otherwise, the collection of artifacts is primarily the responsibility of the State Archaeological Museum in Schleswig .

Museum library

The extensive library in the Heinrich-Sauermann-Haus is a working and reference library . It is accessible to all interested parties by arrangement. The special importance of the museum library results from the large number of older books, magazines and individual articles on the natural history and settlement history of Northern Germany and Scandinavia. Part of the library is in the Ice Age House.

Image and document archive

Old photographs, diaries and other records as important historical sources for describing and assessing changes in habitats in the natural and cultural landscape of the above-mentioned study area are in the archive. It also contains around 700 historical postcards from the region as well as around 100 original photographs. In addition, the museum contains extensive script material and detailed diary entries from the estate of the former museum director Emeis.

Museum newspaper

Since July 2009 the "News from the Natural Science Museum Flensburg" has been published as a four-page half-yearly newspaper. It is published on a voluntary basis. The newspaper is sent to members and sponsors in printed form, but can also be downloaded as a PDF document from the museum's website.

Ice Age House

Ice Age House in Christiansenpark, with spring flowers.

The Ice Age House is the geological-paleontological show magazine of the Natural Science Museum. It is mainly dedicated to the topic of the Ice Age , based on the North German and Scandinavian regions. The bed load as well as the geological and archaeological collections are kept in it. Some of them are presented in showcases. Special exhibitions complement the permanent exhibits. For children z. B. Holiday programs, children's birthdays and fossil identification days are offered, in the summer months outside the Ice Age house.

Outdoor area

In consultation with the monument protection authority and the Freundeskreis Christiansenpark e. V. built a boulder garden . A small garden with insect-friendly plants and an insect wall with nesting facilities are used for museum educational activities.

Christiansenpark

The Ice Age House is located in Christiansen Park, which is currently 4.2 hectares in size . The Flensburger Friedhöfe AöR manage the park. According to suggestions from the museum and the Christiansenpark Friends Association, this is done in a way that tries to balance the interests of people and the needs of animals and plants: only a few lawns are tended as short-cut lawns; in other sections the herbs can ripen to bloom between March and June. During this time, this leads to a density of insects from which bats and birds benefit. In spring crocuses and other spring bloomers are very attractive to the population.

Exhibitions

The area of ​​responsibility of the Natural Science Museum bundles the four core areas of collecting, preserving, researching / documenting and conveying / exhibiting. Lately an above-average amount of time has been devoted to the fourth area.

Permanent exhibition

In 2001 the current permanent exhibition was opened on an area of ​​approx. 510 m². The exhibition presents the natural history, natural history and development opportunities of the region.

Model of a sand wasp with a captured caterpillar.

Five of the six exhibition rooms are dedicated to the region’s formative landscapes: 1. Baltic Sea / Fjord , 2. Inland waters , 3. City , 4. Forest and 5. Field marrow . In the sixth room (“Ice Age”) the visitor learns important and interesting facts about the landscape genesis and geology of the region. In addition to exhibits in showcases, large preparations, models or an installation to illustrate the topic are set up in all six exhibition rooms. The lettering is generally understandable and - due to the proximity to Denmark - largely bilingual (German, Danish). Introductory texts are also written in English.

Birds and sea creatures in showcases in the “Baltic Sea / Fjord” exhibition room.
The kink is a diverse habitat.
Lifelike exhibits illustrate animals that once existed in Schleswig-Holstein or that now live hidden: elk and porpoise.

Media terminals, reading corners, “researcher” and “discovery stations” complement the exhibits as additional elements. They allow visitors to deal with the respective topic individually and independently.

As a reminiscence of the museum's history, the permanent exhibition of the Natural Science Museum commemorates the people who have rendered outstanding services to natural history research in the region and whose collections are now owned by the museum. Pavilions with showcases from this time ideally represent how the exhibits were presented back then.

The foam magazine (Ice Age House) deals with the history of the earth, especially the Ice Ages in the Quaternary , which shaped the landscape of the region. For this purpose, fossils from the geological ages ( Cambrian to Quaternary) are presented in showcases . Diagrams, texts and models complete the offer. The permanent exhibition "Ice Age" is explained with the help of short films, models and maps, as well as a rich collection of sediments with maps of the regions of origin. In Schleswig-Holstein these topics are otherwise only comprehensively presented by the Ice Age Museum in Lütjenburg.

The erratic boulder garden, which is laid out around the building of the Ice Age house, may also be considered a permanent exhibition. Among the boulders is a 1.7 billion year old and eleven ton heavy Småland granite from central Sweden, which was found during road construction work in the north of Flensburg (Flensburger Tageblatt, June 14, 2007, page 15).

Special exhibitions

Special exhibitions are created in-house or borrowed from third parties and enable collaboration with other museums, institutes, associations or private individuals.

Due to the limited space available for this purpose, some of these are small-scale special exhibitions. In the last 30 years u. a. presented the following exhibitions in the Heinrich-Sauermann-Haus

  • from 1982 to 1985: In connection with matinees , according to the motto "Nature in the museum - experience and learning" on the topics: "Domestic predators ", "Wintering", "Endangered fauna - bird protection", "Domestic birds of prey", "Bird and Egg ”,“ Amphibians ”,“ Species Protection for Insects ”,“ Deer - Hare - Rabbit ”,“ Birds of the Flensburg Fjord ”,“ Fish - Seals - Whales ”,“ Ice Age ”,“ Gravel Pit Habitat ”.
  • 1983 to 1992: The “Wandering Museum of the Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel ”, founded in 1950 and now closed, showed the exhibitions “Ecosystems and Environmental Protection”, “ Amber - Gold of the North”, “Development History of Schleswig-Holstein” and in the Flensburg Museum "Landscape change and nature conservation in Schleswig-Holstein". The Zoological Museum Kiel presented the exhibitions "On the silk thread" (about spiders), "Birds in Schleswig-Holstein", "Darwin and evolution ", "The insect as a successful construction" and "Mythical animals" at the same place and during the same period .

More recent special exhibitions have been:

  • Compositions of nature . Macro photographs by Norbert Abromeit. July 11th to September 16th, 2004
  • Animals in amber. October 3 to November 21, 2004
  • 450 million years ago. The Baltic Sea region in the Ordovician. May 15 to September 25, 2005
  • Silurian! The Baltic Sea region over 400 million years ago. April 30th to September 17th, 2006
  • Jellyfish , Butt & Co - Life in the Flensburg Fjord , photo exhibition, March 31 to July 29, 2007
  • Extinct echinoderms , May 6 to August 5, 2007
  • Hornets and other wasps - up close, photo exhibition, August 12 to September 30, 2007
  • Sea urchins 450 million years old , April 13th to September 28th, 2008
  • The Wolf , October 12th to December 14th, 2008
  • Beauty of agates , December 21, 2008 to February 15, 2009
  • Pictures from the Jardelunder Moor , photo exhibition, March 8 to April 19, 2009
  • Tertiary fossils from Jutland, April 26th to September 30th, 2009
  • Ice Age in Schleswig-Holstein, May 17 to August 30, 2009
  • Impressions from the Geltinger Birk, photo exhibition, October 25th to December 6th, 2009
  • Northern Lights , photo exhibition with lecture, December 13, 2009 to February 14, 2010
  • Minerals of Morocco, February 28 to April 18, 2010
  • Trilobite Show, March 14th to May 30th, 2010
  • Cephalopods - feet on the head ?, May 2 to October 3, 2010
  • The porpoise, October 31, 2010 to March 27, 2011
  • Clouds over the forest (together with Museumsberg), October 2-27, 2011
  • Cold times - warm times Climate change (s) in Northern Germany, July 1 to September 30, 2012
  • Rinsing hem - paintings and objects by Ute Meyer, in cooperation with the Maritime Museum Flensburg , February 26 to May 20, 2013
  • Steinarten - An exhibition project, in cooperation with thephenomenta im Nordertor , March 16 to May 26, 2013
  • Evolution on the move, traveling exhibition of the Osnabrück Museum on Schölerberg and Bielefeld University , October 15, 2013 to March 2, 2014
  • Neobiota - Aliens in the front yard, traveling exhibition of the Osnabrück Museum on Schölerberg and Bielefeld University, March 16 to August 17, 2014
  • Intelligence beasts. How smart are the smartest animals? June 19 to September 18, 2016
  • T-shirts, bags and surfactants. The exhibition on sustainable chemistry, January 29 to May 28, 2017
  • Wolves - an exhibition by the Senckenberg Museum für Naturkunde Görlitz , supplemented by information on the situation of wolves in Schleswig-Holstein, 25 February to 10 June 2018

Special exhibitions in the Ice Age House are presented in small glass showcases, for example on fossil corals or fossils in attachments from the region. These exhibits mostly come from the private collections of the volunteers.

Museum educational offers

Museum educational events - often carried out by freelance workers - have been one of its special features since the beginning of the museum. All leaders were or are specialist educators. Didactic studies in the museum were carried out by Willfried Janßen with the University of Education, later the University of Flensburg . The current museum director is involved in the training of students in Flensburg as a lecturer.

For the exhibition, the foam magazine and Christiansenpark, the museum has extensive written didactic material in German and Danish for independent exploration and processing by children or school groups. The museum offers “researcher rucksacks” for preschool children.

Regular holiday programs with numerous events outside the museum as well as children's birthdays are also aimed at groups of visitors who are “remote from the museum” and financially weak. The offers are constantly being revised and adapted.

Special promotions

With luck you can find fossils. Steep coast on the Flensburg Fjord near the Danish Skelde.
  • From April 18 to 20, 2008, the museum hosted the 24th annual meeting of the Gesellschaft für Geschiebekunde.
  • For several years now, the museum has been offering one-day, so-called “beach walks”, during which participants learn about the ice ages and the rocks (boulders, debris) brought by the glaciers on suitable coastlines in the region. The beach hikes have been carried out by biologist Frank Rudolph, Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, since 2008.
  • the museum has been supporting the “ Open Monument Day ” since 2009 with the Ice Age House .
  • Since 2009, following an initiative by the Natural Science Museum in the CITTI Park, the Flensburg museums have been holding museum days every year with selected exhibits and educational offers.
  • The Eiszeit-Haus has been a destination for those interested in geocaching since 2010 . The "Ice Age" and "Creepy Graves" caches are targets here
  • Also since 2010, the Ice Age House has been creating programs for all holidays, which include, for example, “building insect hotels”, “preparing fossils” and “examining pond animals in Christiansenpark”. * Further events can also be booked as part of the holiday offer of the City of Flensburg's Children's and Youth Office.
  • In 2011, on July 23, the “Waltag”, organized based on an idea from the museum, took place in Westerholz for the first time , and in 2012 on July 13. The first occasion for the day was the hundredth anniversary of the stranding of a 20 m long fin whale on March 17, 1911 on the beach near Westerholz. The partners of the event include the Baltic Sea Laboratory of the University of Flensburg and the Society for the Protection of Marine Mammals. Together with the municipality of Westerholz, attention should also be drawn to the threat to whales and seals.
  • The museum is making copies of its butterfly collection available to the Schleswig-Holstein Nature Conservation Foundation for the EU- funded LIFE Aurinia project. It also contains the golden piebald butterfly (Euphydryas aurinia), which is now extinct in Schleswig-Holstein and is to be reintroduced. It is known as an umbrella species: where it thrives, species with less space requirements also survive. For this purpose, for example, appropriate biotopes are to be prepared in the Jardelunder Moor, in the Fröruper Mountains , on the Treßsee and in the Schäferhaus Foundation . Some 90-year-old specimens from the museum collection are genetically compared with living individuals from other regions of Europe in order to find those moths for reintroduction that are genetically as similar as possible to those that used to live in northern Schleswig-Holstein.

Cooperations

There is a lively cooperation with cultural institutes and individual units (nature conservation, forestry, municipal cemeteries) in the city of Flensburg as well as with museums and information centers in the region (e.g. the Archaeological State Museum in Gottorf Castle , Landscape Museum fishing / Unewatt, Pomarium Anglicum fruit museum in Winderatt) and Museum Sønderjylland - Natural History & Palæontologi - in Gramm, DK, as well as NABU -Infozentrum Geltinger Birk, Nature Experience Center Maasholm and Geo-AG Kiel.

With nature conservation organizations such as NABU, the BUND, the nature conservation association in the Langballig office and the Society for the Protection of Marine Mammals e. V. is actively cooperating.

There are established contacts to the Schleswig-Holstein Nature Conservation Foundation. The foundation co-financed film projects through the Krusau-Tunneltal and the foundation land Schäferhaus. There are also good connections to the nature conservation officers of the city of Flensburg and the Schleswig-Flensburg district.

There is particularly close cooperation at the University of Flensburg with the Institute for Biology, General Education and its Didactics and the Institute for Geography and its Didactics. Since the winter semester 1996/97, the museum director has been teaching at the Institute of Biology (including animal identification exercises and museum didactics) and is involved in the training and further education of teachers.

The cooperation with the Baltic Sea Laboratory of the Flensburg University Institute for Biology and Science and its didactics is reflected in joint museum educational events for interested Flensburg residents and guests.

There are also joint projects with the Society for the Protection of Marine Mammals. V. (GSM), such as the Waltag in Westerholz, and the Museum Sønderjylland - Naturhistorie & Palæontologi in grams.

Membership in the following institutions includes:

Once a month outside of the holiday periods, the Flensburg Fossil Collectors Working Group meets in the Ice Age House.

consultation

The museum director is currently deputy head of the advisory board for nature conservation of the city of Flensburg and a member of the hunting board. Citizens contact the museum - mostly by phone - with questions about mushrooms, dealing with wasps, etc.

See also

literature

  • Walther Emeis: The natural history museum of the city of Flensburg. In: The home. 71st year, issue 5, May 1964, ISSN  0017-9701 , pp. 163-167.
  • Willfried Janssen: Walther Emeis 1891–1973 - its importance for local research and nature conservation in Schleswig-Holstein. In: The home. 98th year, issue 6/7, June / July 1991, pp. 157-162.
  • Werner Barkemeyer: The Natural Science Museum Flensburg. In: Natural and regional studies. Journal for Schleswig-Holstein, Hamburg and Mecklenburg. 199th year, 2012, ISSN  1611-3829 , pp. 65-76.

Individual evidence

  1. Central register ( Memento of the original from April 2, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. - Website of the central register of biological research collections in Germany. Retrieved February 17, 2012 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / zefod.genres.de
  2. a b c Walther Emeis: The natural history museum of the city of Flensburg. In: The home. 71st year, No. 5, 1964, pp. 163–167.
  3. a b c d e f g Werner Barkemeyer: Museum concept. Unpublished document, October 2011
  4. Willfried Janßen: Walther Emeis 1891–1973 - its importance for local research and nature conservation in Schleswig-Holstein. In: The home. 98th year, issue 6/7, June / July 1991, pp. 157-162.
  5. Willfried Janßen: Walther Emeis 1891–1973 - its importance for local research and nature conservation in Schleswig-Holstein. In: The home. 98th year, issue 6/7, June / July 1991, p. 158.
  6. Stiftung Naturschutz Schleswig Holstein accessed on May 3, 2012 ( Memento of the original from March 1, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.stiftung-naturschutz-sh.de
  7. Willfried Janßen: Walther Emeis 1891–1973 - its importance for local research and nature conservation in Schleswig-Holstein. In: The home. 98th year, issue 6/7, June / July 1991, p. 160.
  8. Walther Emeis: Unsuccessful attempts to settle the short-toed eagle in Schleswig-Holstein in the course of the previous century. In: The home. Volume 36, 1926, pp. 87–90.
  9. List of special exhibitions accessed on May 3, 2012
  10. Enter “Flensburg” in the search mask and go to page 3 of the list. Retrieved February 18, 2012
  11. ^ Geological-paleontological working group Kiel . Website of the Schleswig-Holstein Nature Conservation Foundation. Retrieved February 18, 2012

Web links

Commons : Natural Science Museum Flensburg  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files