American Museum of Natural History
Description
Home to the largest and arguably most fabulous collection of dinosaur fossils in the world, AMNH’s fourth-floor dino halls have been blowing people’s minds for decades. Roughly 80% of the bones on display were actually dug out of the ground by Indiana Jones types. The thrills begin when you cross the threshold of the Theodore Roosevelt Rotunda, where you’re confronted with a towering barosaurus that’s rearing high on its hind legs to protect its young from an attacking allosaurus – an impressive welcome to the world’s largest museum of its kind. During the museum’s mid 1990s renovation, several specimens were remodelled to incorporate discoveries made during that time. The Tyrannosaurus rex, for instance, was once believed to have walked upright, Godzilla-style; it now stalks prey with its head lowered and tail raised parallel to the ground.
The rest of the museum is equally dramatic. The newly opened Hall of Human Origins boasts a fine display of your old cousins, the Neanderthals. The Hall of Biodiversity examines world ecosystems and environmental preservation, and a life-size model of a blue whale hangs from the cavernous ceiling of the Hall of Ocean Life. The impressive Hall of Meteorites was brushed up and reorganised in 2003. The space’s focal point is Ahnighito, the largest iron meteor on display anywhere in the world, weighing in at 34 tons (more than 30,000kg).
The spectacular $210 million Rose Center for Earth & Space – dazzling to come upon at night – is a giant silvery globe where you can discover the universe via 3-D shows in the Hayden Planetarium and light shows in the Big Bang Theater. An IMAX theatre screens larger-than-life nature programmes, and you can always learn something new from the innovative temporary exhibitions, an easily accessible research library (with vast photo and print archives), several cool gift shops and friendly, helpful staff.
Hours
Mon-Sun 10 am-5:45 pm.
This is a great place!
Hi I wiillbe visiting the museum sometime this year, but would like to know whether the Tyrannosaurus,Apatosaurus, Stegosaurus and Triceratops are 100% fossil rather than cast?