An estate on an eight-hectare (20 acre) property in Buenos Aires'
Nueva Pompeya ward became the site of a homemade museum in 1866, when 14-year-old
Francisco Moreno and his father classified and mounted their extensive collection of fossils and artifacts, gathered in excursions along the property and surroundings. The younger Moreno organized his collection as a public display, and with funding from the
Province of Buenos Aires, inaugurated the Anthropology and Ethnography Museum of Buenos Aires in 1879. . (
Tierra del Fuego) Featuring over 15,000 artifacts, the collection was ultimately transferred to the new
La Plata Museum in 1888. Explorations in the
Gran Chaco region conducted at the time by
University of Buenos Aires naturalist
Juan Bautista Ambrosetti led to an extensive, new collection, however, and in 1904, the latter inaugurated the University of Buenos Aires Museum of
Ethnography. Dr. Ambrosetti died in 1917, and its management was continued by his collaborators, Drs.
Salvador Debenedetti and
Félix Outes. The museum was relocated to its present location in the city's
Montserrat ward in 1927; the
Italianate structure had been designed by
Pedro Benoit for the School of Law, and completed in 1878. Many of the collections of archeology and anthropology of the
Bernardino Rivadavia Natural Sciences Museum were assigned to this museum in the decade of 1940, despite this, the institution became largely overshadowed. It was bolstered, however, by the 1958 creation of a Degree in
Anthropology by the University of Buenos Aires, and the institution was subsequently transferred to the university's School of Philosophy and Letters. ==References==