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1. How lives became lists and scientific papers became data: cataloguing authorship during the nineteenth century.

2. Needham at the crossroads: history, politics and international science in wartime China (1942–1946).

3. Stories of stones and bones: disciplinarity, narrative and practice in British popular prehistory, 1911–1935.

4. Industrial research at the Eastern Telegraph Company, 1872–1929.

5. Fossil dealers, the practices of comparative anatomy and British diplomacy in Latin America, 1820–1840.

6. Replication, re-placing and naval science in comparative context, c.1868–1904.

7. Teaching natural history at the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology.

8. Lorenz Oken (1779–1851): Naturphilosophie and the reform of natural history.

9. Knowledge of childhood: materiality, text, and the history of science – an interdisciplinary round table discussion.

10. Openness versus secrecy? Historical and historiographical remarks.

11. Following insects around: tools and techniques of eighteenth-century natural history.

12. Locality and circulation in the Habsburg Empire: disputing the Carlsbad medical salt, 1763-1784.

13. The problem of raccoon intelligence in behaviourist America.

14. Reinventing machines: the transmission history of the Leibniz calculator.

15. From garden biotech to garage biotech: amateur experimental biology in historical perspective.

16. Unrolling Egyptian mummies in nineteenth-century Britain.

17. Onwards facing backwards: the rhetoric of science in nineteenth-century Greece.

18. ‘Keeping in the race’: physics, publication speed and national publishing strategies in Nature, 1895–1939.

19. Aepyornis as moa: giant birds and global connections in nineteenth-century science.

20. The politics of participation: Francis Galton's Anthropometric Laboratory and the making of civic selves.

21. ‘The monster’? The British popular press and nuclear culture, 1945–early 1960s.

22. Preaching at the British Association for the Advancement of Science: sermons, secularization and the rhetoric of conflict in the 1870s.

23. Making biomedicine in twentieth-century Italy: Domenico Marotta (1886–1974) and the Italian Higher Institute of Health.

24. The uses of analogy: James Clerk Maxwell's ‘On Faraday's lines of force’ and early Victorian analogical argument.