Search
You searched for:
ROM walksType (19)
- Blog Post (813)
- Page (295)
- Inspiring Story (146)
- Event (130)
- Staff (71)
- ROM at Home Activity (70)
- Gallery (39)
- Research Project (20)
- Friends Groups (12)
- Magazine Article (11)
- Exhibitions (9)
- Video (8)
- Webform (8)
- Volunteer Opportunity (7)
- Learning Portal - Resource (5)
- Community Project (4)
- Advanced Page (2)
- Learning Portal - At the ROM Activity (1)
- Microsite Page (1)
Viewing 1161 - 1170 of 1652 results
Museum Monday with Melissa- March 30, 2015
Hope you all had a great #PROMX and #MuseumWeek! This past week was quite busy and eventful. This coming week will be more focused on workshops and learning in creative ways. Here’s a few things to take part in this week. Young adults will enjoy this week’s ROM Speaks event entitled “
A National Symposium on Our Blue Planet
Oceans. Canada borders three of them – we have more coastline than any country in the world, some 200,000km. Canadian scientists study all of them – from south-east Asia to the Cape of Good Hope to our own watery borders. The ROM’s own curator Dr. Claire Healy has discovered whole orders
Tarifs de groupe
Le ROM propose des activités de groupe à la carte, vous pouvez donc personnaliser votre événement en fonction des besoins de votre groupe et de votre budget. N’hésitez pas à communiquer avec nous, si vous ne trouvez pas ce que vous cherchez. Minimum de 20 participant.e.s Entrée grand
Nature meets Culture at Archaeology Weekend!
Humans would have been aware of the other creatures that shared their world from earliest times. At first they would have had an eye towards possible predators or competitors, then possible prey as they became hunters. As the cognitive ability of Early Humans developed, they would observe the
No Cutting Corners: Canada C3 Explores our Country's Coastline
Guest Blog written by 2017 Environmental Visual Communication student Mary Paquet Have you ever been in a place where you knew that not many other people had ever stepped foot? As an “ocean nation”, surrounded on three sides by the longest coastline of any other country, there are nooks and
There’s bones in them there hills: Fossil Finding in the Badlands
written by: Mary Paquet, Intern, ROM Paleontology How do you go about finding a dinosaur? It’s the best kind of treasure hunt. The thrill, the satisfaction, the excitement of finding a fossil is something not everyone gets to experience. The Royal Ontario Museums’s very own Dr. David Evans,
An Innovative Approach to A Puzzling Problem
Conserving an Indian Chintz Cope made in the Eighteenth Century for the Armenian Church Here in the Textile Conservation department of the ROM, Senior Textile Conservator Chris Paulocik and I have begun preparing objects for display in the upcoming exhibition: “The Cloth that Changed the World:
From Poop to Plankton: Working Together to Conserve our Ocean’s Gardeners
Guest blog written by Environmental Visual Communication student Meghan Callon The world’s largest animal creates the world’s largest poop. By simply going about their daily functions, blue whales supply the “miracle grow” of the sea. They fertilize the ocean’s surface waters! But there
Volunteer Opportunities
There are many areas at the Royal Ontario Museum where you may volunteer. Learn more about the ROM's commitment to its volunteers here.
Coordonnées du service des adhésions
Service des adhésions 416 586-5700 membership@rom.on.ca Heures d'ouverture Coordonnées du centre de télémarketing (Artsmarketing Services) 416 849-9486