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| - History of location is unknown.
- In the late eighteenth century, British Ekats founded a museum to house some of the treasures they discovered around the world. It was deemed the perfect place to store a new find--the Rosetta Stone, a priceless ancient Egyptian artifact that contained a crucial hint to an Ekaterina Clue. The Rosetta Stone is on public display, but the Ekats use their advance surveillance system to keep a careful watch on all visitors. Anyone who spends a suspicious amount of time in the Egyptian gallery gets a special treat--a trip to the secret underground prison.
- The British Museum was a major museum devoted to human history and culture, located in London.
- The British Museum is a museum set up in London, South-East England. It is dedicated to displaying artifacts and exhibits from all periods of British, and international, history.
- The British Museum is located on the Acropolis, in the center of Athens, Greece. It is one of the most historically important buildings still standing, and is especially well known for its remarkable sculptures - the Elgin Marbles - depicting scenes from the lives of the ordinary people of classical Athens. The British Museum is particulary notable for ensuring that there are rarely any Britons actually within the building, visitors mostly hail from cultures almost guaranteed to infuriate the average Briton from the overweight American blocking the stairs to the Asian who seems to be bent on invading as much personal space as he can find.
- Major museum of London, founded 1753 and opened to the public at large in 1759. Curiously there is no museum devoted to the history of Britain. Address Great Russell Street, London, Greater London, England, WC1B 3DG Nearby attractions include the British Library, Brunei Gallery, the Building Centre, Covent Garden, and the Cartoon Museum. Closest stations: Euston Square Station, Goodge Street Station, Holborn Station, Russell Square Station and Tottenham Court Road Station.
- Dr. Helen Magnus and John Druitt went there to ask the curator to give them the keystone needed to unlock the holographic city. However, he had secretly replaced the artifact with a copy in order to sell the original to a buyer in Hong Kong.
- The British Museum is one of the world's foremost museums of culture and history. Located in London, United Kingdom, it is home to 13 million objects, spanning from early civilization to the contemporary period, from many of the world's cultures. Its vast collection includes many pieces from ancient Egyptian, Greek, and Roman civilzations, as well as from Africa, Asia, and the Americas. Founded in 1753, the collections grew so large that it had to spin off its natural history collection as the separate British Museum of Natural History in 1887. The library of the museum was the national library and formed the base of the British Library, created in 1973 and moved offsite in in 1997.
- The British Museum (大英博物館 Daiei Hakubutsukan?), also known as the Arsenal (アーセナル Āsenaru?, lit. Arsenal), is a museum in London. It is widely considered to be one of the world's greatest museums of human history and culture. Its permanent collection, numbering some eight million works, is amongst the finest, most comprehensive, and largest in existence and originates from all continents, illustrating and documenting the story of human culture from its beginnings to the present. The British Library was originally a department of the British Museum and from the mid-19th century occupied the famous circular British Museum Reading Room. It became legally separate in 1973, and by 1997 had moved into its new purpose-built building at St Pancras, London.
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