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Research & Collections

From its beginning in 1836, the New York State Museum has been home to some of the nation’s leading scientists, including pioneers in archaeology, paleontology, ethnology, and botany. Its collections now rank among the finest in many fields and total more than sixteen million specimens, objects, and artifacts. 

 

Archaeology

Archaeology

Biology

Biology

Ethnography

Ethnography

Geology

Geology

History

History

Paleontology

Paleontology

State History1

State History1

Research at the New York State Museum today is as exciting as it is varied, with scientists and historians actively directing projects in biology, anthropology, geology, paleontology, and history. Research by staff represents one tangible way in which information about the natural and cultural histories of New York, and the world, is made available to the public. Research findings are presented in scholarly and popular publications, at professional meetings, in exhibitions, and in public programs.

Researchers throughout the world use the collections of the New York State Museum to address questions about New York's natural and human heritage. The Museum’s collections are made available to researchers and scholars and are also used in exhibitions and public programs. Participation in Museum collections curation and research projects is possible through internships and volunteer opportunities.

To explore the Museum’s Research and Collections Division, hover your mouse over the Research and Collections block at the top navigation bar.

News Articles

Antiracism Resources: Indigenous History is New York's History

Published February 23, 2024 | State History

This article originally appeared on the DHPSNY website. On February 1, we kicked off our 2024 antiracism Dialogue series with a program to introduce the 250th commemoration field guides from AASLH and APHNYS/Office of the New York State Histori...

Save the Date: 2024 New York State Family History Conference

Published February 15, 2024 | State History

This article originally appeared on the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society website. This year's theme is "Connect at the Crossroads,” and you can attend the two-day conference online or in person at the Erie...

New Netherland Institute Graduate Fellowship: Documenting Untold Stories 1664-1827

Published February 8, 2024 | State History

The New Netherland Institute (NNI) seeks a scholar doing graduate work in History, African American Studies, Native American and Indigenous Studies, Germanic Literature, or archives management (and allied fields) to identify, resear...

The Hidden History of Tone’s Pond Discovered: The Namesake of a Revolutionary War Hero

Published February 7, 2024 | State History

This article originally appeared on the Brewster High School Newspaper website. For many years, there has been a great debate regarding the origins of the name of Lake Tonetta in the Town of Southeast in Putnam County, New York. During thi...

From Field to Lab: Research Associate in Ornithology Connects Conservation with Museum Collections

Published February 5, 2024 | Ornithology

Locally-based Ornithologist Dr. Taza Schaming was appointed as a Research Associate in 2023, and has been assisting Dr. Jeremy Kirchman, NYSM Curator of Birds and Mammals, in our specimen preparation lab, turning salvaged birds into research speci...

NYSM Archaeologist Featured in the Times Union for Research Identifying 19th-Century African American Farms

Published February 5, 2024 | Historical Archaeology

NYSM Historical Archaeologist Michael Lucas and his team were recently featured in the Times Union for their fieldwork and research leading to the identification of Albany-area farms owned and operated by African Americans during the 1800s. Dis...

NYSM Archaeologist Talks Trash with the New Amsterdam History Center

Published January 31, 2024 | Historical Archaeology

  On Thursday, February 8 from 6-7:30pm, NYSM Historical Archaeologist Michael Lucas joins the New Amsterdam History Center for the online event, "Trash Talk: A Lively Discussion of 17th Century Refuse, Recycling, and the Reshaping of Mana...

New-York Historical Society Presents New York Before New York: The Castello Plan of New Amsterdam

Published January 31, 2024 | State History

This article originally appeared on the I Love NY website. This March, the New-York Historical Society presents New York Before New York: The Castello Plan of New Amsterdam, on the occasion of the 400th anniversary of the Dutch foundi...

Making History Come Alive at St. Thomas Aquinas College Through Grant from the Robert David Lion Gardiner Foundation.

Published January 31, 2024 | State History

This article originally appeared on the St. Thomas Aquinas College website. St. Thomas Aquinas College has received a $229,624 two-year grant from The Robert David Lion Gardiner Foundation to establish The St. Thomas Aquinas Institute...

Coupling Indigenous Artwork and Ancient Artifacts

Published January 22, 2024 | Native American Archaeology

The New York State Museum maintains its extensive material collections for the benefit of individuals and communities across the New York region and beyond. Increasingly, indigenous scholars, artists, and community members are accessing the NYSM's...

Digitizing the Erie Canal

Published January 22, 2024 | State History

This article originally appeared in an Erie Canalway National Heritage Corridor newsletter. Paper charts of the Erie Canal are in the process of being transformed to electronic navigational charts. The Department of Commerce’s National Oceanic ...

Cedar Hill Schoolhouse Museum Opens for the Season February 4

Published January 18, 2024 | State History

This article originally appeared in a Bethlehem Historical Association press release. The Cedar Hill Schoolhouse Museum, home of the Bethlehem Historical Association, 1003 River Road, Selkirk, opens for the season on February 4 at 2 p.m. Dis...

From the Collections: Shakers and the New York State Museum 

Published January 17, 2024 | Social History

2024 marks the 250th anniversary of the Shakers coming to colonial America. The Shakers were a small sect of Quakers that started in Manchester, England in 1747. They were formally known as the United Society of Believers in Christ’s First and Sec...

Apply Now for 2024 NYS Canal System Tourism Infrastructure and Events Grants

Published January 16, 2024 | State History

This article originally appeared in an Erie Canalway National Heritage Corridor newsletter. The New York State Canal Corporation and the Erie Canalway National Heritage Corridor are offering competitive grant funding to support tourism and recr...

Grant Program to Develop and Enhance the Museum Workforce Relaunched by the Institute of Museum and Library Services

Published December 20, 2023 | State History

This article originally appeared on the IMLS website. The Institute of Museum and Library Services is now accepting applications for its relaunched 21st Century Museum Professionals Program (21MP). 21MP will support projects that offer pro...

Military museum wants your stories

Published December 14, 2023 | State History

This article originally appeared on the Post Star website. From a press release: The New York State Military Museum and Veterans Research Center in Saratoga Springs has resumed its veterans’ oral history collection program and is seeking interv...

New Publication on the Devonian Features Significant Contributions from NYSM Geologist

Published December 11, 2023 | Devonian Geology

  The Devonian Period occurred between 419.2 million and 358.9 million years ago. Devonian-age rocks in New York State have been utilized by geologists, paleontologists, and educators to study the development of life, understand geolo...

Spiller Newspaper Paperweight Collection

Published December 7, 2023 | Cultural History

Mortimer Spiller was born in 1922 to Russian immigrants who settled in LeRoy, New York. Spiller’s college training in business and advertising was interrupted by service in World War II. After the war, he was eager to complete his education and pu...

The Atlantic Cable Projectors (1895) returns to the New York State Museum

Published December 5, 2023 | Cultural History

Daniel Huntington (1816–1906) The Atlantic Cable Projectors, 1895 Oil on canvas

CCHS accepting applications for Elinor Robb Troicke Memorial Scholarship

Published December 5, 2023 | State History

This article originally appeared on the Chenango County Historical Society website. The Chenango County Historical Society (CCHS) has announced that applications are now being accepted for the Elinor Robb Troicke Memorial Scholarship CCHS p...