In 1911, Longman moved to Brisbane to take up a position as a member of the staff of the
Queensland Museum, rising to become acting director in 1917 and director in 1918. There, the main focus of his interests turned from botany to zoology, especially
vertebrate paleontology, describing new genera of fish, marine reptiles, dinosaurs and a
marsupial. He wished to make the museum more of an educational institution, rather than a repository of fossils. He acquired for the museum several dinosaur skeletons, including the
Rhoetosaurus brownei. He published approximately 70 papers which appeared in the
Memoirs of the Queensland Museum. He also wrote a popular column –
Nature’s Ways – in the Brisbane
Courier-Mail. He retired from the museum in 1945 and died at his home in Brisbane in 1954. He was survived by his wife, Irene Longman. ==Honours and awards==