The Nuttall Museum: Difference between revisions
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===History=== | ===History=== | ||
The Nuttall Museum originally held collections not only of stuffed animals but also of mathematical oddities, in honour of children's TV presenters Terry Nutkins (''Animal Magic'') and Johnny Ball (''Think of a Number''), donated to Malton by Blue Peter editor Biddy Baxter. The presenters' names were combined to give the Museum its title. (The proposal that it be called the Nut-Ball Museum was rejected.) | |||
Sadly, while the stuffed animals were left alone by the zombies, the braininess inherent in the mathematical oddities (such as a display of Pi calculated to a million decimal places, and some fascinating fluid dynamics equations) rendered them surprisingly palatable to the undead visitors. As a result, only the stuffed animal exhibits remain for curious post-outbreak tourists to admire. | |||
===Barricade Policy=== | ===Barricade Policy=== |
Revision as of 21:02, 30 January 2009
The Nuttall Museum
Pimbank [66,44]
Basic Info:
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Description
The Nuttall Museum is a Stuffed Animal Museum located at [66,44] in Pimbank.
History
The Nuttall Museum originally held collections not only of stuffed animals but also of mathematical oddities, in honour of children's TV presenters Terry Nutkins (Animal Magic) and Johnny Ball (Think of a Number), donated to Malton by Blue Peter editor Biddy Baxter. The presenters' names were combined to give the Museum its title. (The proposal that it be called the Nut-Ball Museum was rejected.)
Sadly, while the stuffed animals were left alone by the zombies, the braininess inherent in the mathematical oddities (such as a display of Pi calculated to a million decimal places, and some fascinating fluid dynamics equations) rendered them surprisingly palatable to the undead visitors. As a result, only the stuffed animal exhibits remain for curious post-outbreak tourists to admire.
Barricade Policy
VSB, per the Pimbank Barricade Plan
Current Status
You are standing outside the Nuttall Museum, a four-storey yellow-stone building criss-crossed with police tape. The building's doors have been left wide open, and you can see that the interior of the building has been ruined.--Drew Vino 14:06, 28 September 2008 (BST)
This page, The Nuttall Museum, is a locations stub. Please help us to improve the wiki by contributing to this page. Be sure the following information is added to the page: coordinates, suburb, 9 block map (or 16 block map for large buildings), description, barricading policy, and history. Please refer to the Location Style Guide. |