Each of the museum's collections are the largest of its kind in
Georgia, and the collections are linked by GMNH to research, public service, and educational programs. The specimens in the collections are important for student and professional research and for public edification, as it is visited by roughly 100 scientists that use the collections in their research. Each collection is professionally managed by specialists. GMNH provides information and specimen loans to researchers worldwide. The
Anthropology Collection is made up of
pottery and various remains, adding up to a total of over 3 million artifacts and specimens, making it the most extensive in the state. The collection is housed in the Archaeology Laboratory, which is part of the UGA Department of Anthropology. The
Arthropods Collection is part of the Entomology Department at UGA, and it houses more than 1 million pinned and alcohol-preserved insect specimens. The majority of the collection is from the
southeast U.S. and is determined to a species. The
Botany Collection is one of the largest collections of plant samples in the southeastern United States. Agencies and persons throughout the nation turn to this Department of Plant Biology Herbarium for identification assistance. This Herbarium is part of the UGA Department of Plant Biology. The
Geology Collection is made up of three smaller collections: the Allard Collection for Economic Geology, the Mineralogy Collection, and the Paleontology Collection. Together, these collections comprise over 33,500 specimens, fossils, and casts, and the Allard Collection is available online. The Geology Collection is part of the UGA Department of Geology. The
Herpetology Collection began being organized in 1940 and now houses over 46,000
reptile and
amphibian specimens that comprise most of the species in the Southeast. The
Ichthyology Collection started growing in the 1940s and now houses over 825 different species of fish in over 325,000 bottled specimens. These alcohol-preserved tissues provide greater accessibility for evaluation of genomic diversity in these specimens. The Collection includes multiple endangered or rare freshwater fish from the Southeast. The
Invertebrate Collection houses over 10,000 freshwater mussels along with multiple catalogued non-insects and a diverse collection from
Gray's Reef. While newer specimens are available for genomic work, many of the Collection's specimens are extinct or endangered. The
Mammalogy Collection started in the 1940s and thus contains specimens from the early 1900s that provide a better historical lens into the mammals of the state over time. The Collection houses over 25,000 specimens such as skins, skeletal material, and preserved mammals, and it's one of the few mammal collections accredited by the
American Society of Mammalogists. The
Mycology Collection houses over 30,000 specimens of fungi from the Southeast and other parts of the world and is particularly rich in
ascomycetes of Georgia and the tropical Americas. This Mycological Herbarium is an internationally recognized repository for research projects conducted by the
U.S. Department of Agriculture, and it's one of the few significant collections of its kind in the country. The
Ornithology Collection was formed in the 1940s but began being collected before then, and it now houses over 5,650 specimens of mostly study skins in addition to 800 bird egg clutches from around the world. The specimens are collected mainly from previously rural and now urban areas of Georgia and partly from areas under siege due to destruction of rainforests in
Central America. The
Zooarchaeology Collection is used to identify animal remains for universities, museums, and government agencies throughout the Southeast, the
Caribbean, and
South America. It houses over 4,100 fish, amphibian, reptile, bird, and mammal skeletal specimens. This Zooarchaeology Laboratory is part of the UGA Department of Anthropology. ==See also==