18 Moles in Jar

Location: Case 12, shelf 3 near the Museum door (Grant Museum).

Available for viewing (and more information on) at: Grant Museum, London.Image copyright held by : UCL Museums/Grant Museum.

This jar contains 18 moles. According the Mark Carnall, the curator of the Grant Museum how they came to be here it is not quite known, although it is thought that they might have been used for teaching and research in zoology and comparative anatomy, which historically included animal dissection.

The Glass Jar of Moles has it’s own twitter account, @GlassJarOfMoles. This is how they are described on twitter: “We many moles proudly reside at . A disparate lot, our interests lie in adventure, science, equality, educational disadvantage, history & worms.”

These moles also appear on the Museum of Unthings, providing an interesting, alternative story to this object.

The Grant Museum has an adoption facility. You can not adopt these moles as someone already has, though there are many others you could chose from. Check here if your interested.

Image courtesy of Teaching and Research Collections and UCL Museums.

diamondPhysical Object available to view at UCL Museums. (Search Grant Museum Catalogue: Z2754 )

250px-Yellow-Circle-grey_centre.svg Digital Object – Online sources.

Mole Feet Amulets

L0069170 Amulet from the Lovett Archive

These two mole’s feet were carried in a pocket as an amulet to protect from toothache, collected in England (around 1933). They are part of the Pitt Rivers Museum. For much more details on this object and to see related objects please visit their online catalogue.

Image credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images

250px-Yellow-Circle-grey_centre.svgDigital Object – Online sources.

triangle2Physical Object borrowed from non UCL Museum collection. Available to view (Here in the Pitt Rivers Museum Catalogue).

Cooking with Moles

Mole sauce does not contain any mole. Indeed, it is generally stated that moles do not make good food; check out this blog by ediblegeography.com.

Mole-Catchers-Gibbet

Mole Sauce is the generic name for a number of sauces originally used in Mexican cuisine, as well as for dishes based on these sauces. It comes in a variety of colours with a variety of ingredients. It is derived from Spanish and comes from Nahuatl mōlli: “sauce”.

Here are some recipes.

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Black Bean Mole Burgers.

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Tequila-Marinated Chicken with Mexican Mole Sauce
Recipe courtesy of Emeril Lagasse
SHOW:The Essence of Emeril
EPISODE: Essence of Chocolate

“How to make Mole sauce’. By The Frugal Chef

250px-Yellow-Circle-grey_centre.svgDigital Objects – Online sources.

Whats that mole on my skin?

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The moles on our bodies are small coloured spots on the skin made up of cells called melanocytes, which produce the pigment in your skin. They can be flat or raised. Exposure to the sun stimulates the melanocytes and they can darken. When they are flat they are often called freckles. The raised moles, if you squinted your eyes, could resemble tiny mole hills, with a bit of imagination.

How to identify a mole: from Embarrassing Bodies.

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Please contact the UCL Pathology Collections to view (image z7.jpg).

This sample was taken from a post-mortem of a woman aged 43 years old who died of gastric carcinoma. It is an example of congenitally pigmented skin. Location: UCL Pathology Collections. Rights:  UCL Pathology Collections, UCL Museums.

Melanocytes can transform in to melanomas which cause cancer.

The NHS have a useful guide to moles here.

 

Courtesy of Teaching and Research Collections and UCL Museums.

250px-Yellow-Circle-grey_centre.svgDigital Objects – online sources.

diamondPhysical Object available to view at UCL Museums.

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The Star Nosed Mole.

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The image came from here. (from ‘The Animal House: Anatomy Counts’)

Online these unusual little creatures don’t have many friends, often begin called ugly.

For more information about how the moles ‘see’ through their noses check out Smithsonian.com

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This video is from Arkivr.org. full video credits are available on this page.

The head and jaw of one of these can be found in the Cambridge Museum of Zoology (UMZC No.E.5371.D)

250px-Yellow-Circle-grey_centre.svg Digital Objects – Online sources (search arkive.org for more variants).

triangle2 Physical Object borrowed from non UCL Museum collection. Available to view (Here in the Cambridge Museum of Zoology (UMZC No.E.5371.D) ).

A Mole of Moles

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Picture from Here. (Illustrator unknown).

‘About Education’ explain the mole as a unit of measurement simply here. Or, if you’d rather, here is a video showing how to find how many moles are in a litre of water:

So what would a mole of moles be? This blog proposes a (sort of) answer.

250px-Yellow-Circle-grey_centre.svgDigital Objects – Online sources.

Mr. Mole and Mole Hill

Wind and the Willows is possibly one of the most famous English story’s that features a mole. It was originally produced as a book written by Kenneth Grahame and published by Methuen in 1908 and since then a number of abridged versions have been published by many. More details can be found here.

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BBC produced a radio version in 1983 read by Bernard Cribbins. This is available to listen to here.

It has been shown on television in a variety of formats including this Thames Television production (1989)

Uploaded to YouTube by feverpitch96 on 11 Jan 2010.

This is the opening titles to the 1980s Cosgrove-Hall television series of The Wind In The Willows. The theme tune is sung by Ralph McTell.

Wind in the Willows is current inception is as a theatre production by Royal Opera House.

The Vaudeville Theatre play at the Royal Opera House is available to see until the end of January 2015. Choreographed and directed by Will Tuckett. Find out more at http://www.roh.org.uk/willows.

Uploaded to You tube by Royal Opera House on 9 Nov 2012.

triangle2Physical Object borrowed from non UCL Museum collection. Many versions available to view (here in the British Library).

physical object Physical Object available to view/buy.

250px-Yellow-Circle-grey_centre.svgDigital Objects – Online sources.

Taxidermy Moles

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Title: Taxidermy ‘Moroccan mole dressed in a Fez hat’ and ‘Mr. Moley’.

Date: Oct 20, 2013

Producer: Julie Johnson. Description: Making My Moles (click on image for blog post by maker).

This is derived from the taxidermy then that found at the Grant Museum search Grant Museum Catalogue for an example of a taxidermy mole), although it is created for different purposes. This form of taxidermy has received criticism from some.

Here is an article discussing these attitudes by Matthew Bell from The Independent Online titled: ‘Stuff and nonsense’

physical object Physical Object available to view/buy.

250px-Yellow-Circle-grey_centre.svgDigital Objects – Online sources (available here).

diamondPhysical Object available to view at UCL Museums (search Grant Museum Catalogue: Z591 ).

Courtesy of Teaching and Research Collections and UCL Museums.

A Jar of Marsupial (not a) Mole.

The marsupial mole is not a mole according to Linnaean taxonomy and the labels in the Grant Museum. Although it evolved to burrow like the European mole and the golden mole, all three are from different families. The marsupial mole is actually made up of two species (six or some variations in all) that are very similar. More information is provided by our good friends at Wiki.

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This is what one of the marsupial moles the Grant Museum have look like. (Notoryctes typhlops). Available to view (and more information about) at the Grant Museum, London.

For more information on this mole, here is an article from Science Daily (2010):

Title: Do holes make moles? Surprising first ancestor of bizarre marsupial moles

Image courtesy of Teaching and Research Collections and UCL Museums.

diamondPhysical Object available to view at UCL Museums (search Grant Museum Catalogue: Z81 ).

250px-Yellow-Circle-grey_centre.svg Digital Objects – Online sources

Dissecting a mole

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This is a Partially dissected marsupial mole from the Grant Museum.

youtube.com/watch?v=7Zc5JgQ1fl8

(Please copy and paste link into search engine to view)

This clip shows a mole being dissected. It was uploaded to YouTube in 2012 by Eric Smith.

Image courtesy of Teaching and Research Collections and UCL Museums.

250px-Yellow-Circle-grey_centre.svgDigital Objects – Online sources.
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