The American Museum of Natural History is the largest natural history museum in the world with a mission commensurately monumental in scope. The entire museum spans 4 city blocks and consists of some 25 interconnected buildings. Though today the phrase "natural history" is restricted to the study of animal life, the museum—founded in 1869 on the heels of discoveries by Darwin and other Victorians—uses it in its original sense: that is, the study of all natural objects, animal, vegetable and mineral.
Explorer, the AMNH’s interactive application for the iPhone and iPod Touch, serves as a navigational tool through the museum’s 570,000 square feet and provides in-depth tours through the halls and a scavenger hunt option. The museum has about 360 devices that can be borrowed during a visit.
The museum has scientists who study the diversity of Earth's species, life in the ancient past and the universe. The museum contains more than 40 exhibition halls, displaying a portion of the institution's 32 million specimens and artifacts. The exhibition program rotates as much of this material into public view as possible. Possessing the most scientifically important collection of dinosaurs and fossil vertebrates in the world, the museum has six halls that tell the story of vertebrate evolution. Two new halls feature some of the public's favorites—including Tyrannosaurus rex and Apatosaurus. Also on view in the Roosevelt rotunda is the tallest free-standing dinosaur exhibit in the world, which has been remounted to reflect current scientific theory about dinosaur behavior. This tableau depicts a massive mother Barosaurus trying to protect her calf from an attacking Allosaurus.
The Hall of Biodiversity is devoted to the most pressing environmental issues of our time: the critical need to preserve the variety and interdependence of Earth's living things. Other permanent exhibits, known for their striking dioramas portraying people and animals on indigenous ground, include the Margaret Mead Hall of Pacific Peoples, the Hall of Asian Peoples, the Hall of African Peoples, the Hall of South American Peoples, the Spizter Hall of Human Origins, the Hall of North American Mammals, the Hall of African Mammals, the Hall of Ocean Life, the Hall of Reptiles and Amphibians and the Hall of North American Birds. For geology buffs there are also the separate halls of meteorites, minerals and gems.
The stunning Rose Center for Earth and Space is a $200 million glass box created by architect James Stewart Polshek. Enclosing a great white sphere, it opened to international acclaim in early 2000. The center features the Heilbrunn Cosmic Pathway, where each step equals about 75 million years of cosmic evolution; the Scales of the Universe, which illustrates the vast range in sizes in our universe; the Cullman Hall of the Universe, focusing on discoveries in modern astrophysics; and the new Hayden Planetarium—the world's most technologically advanced—which offers an absorbing three-dimensional tour of the universe and a multisensory re-creation of the Big Bang.
The first wing, the Romanesque Revival exposure running along West 77th Street, dates from 1872 and is based on a design by Calvert Vaux and J. Wrey Mould. In 1892 the two turrets, central granite stairway and arcade of arches were added based on a design by J. C. Cady & Co. The 77th Street entrance leads to the Grand Gallery, which holds the 63-foot-long Great Canoe, carved from the trunk of a single large cedar tree. It was acquired in 1883 was created by craftsmen from more than one of the First Nations of British Columbia.
As one of the world's preeminent scientific research institutions, the museum sponsors more than 100 field expeditions each year, including ongoing research projects in Chile, China, Cuba, French Guiana, Madagascar, Mongolia and New Guinea. It maintains three permanent field stations: Great Gull Island, St. Catherine's Island and the Southwestern Research Station.
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Rose Center for Earth and Space
Ongoing The Rose Center encompasses the Hayden Planetarium and exhibitions that explore the vast range of sizes in the cosmos; the 13-billion-year history of the universe; the nature of galaxies, stars and planets; and the features of planet Earth. A moon rock is displayed near the entrance to the Gottesman Hall of Planet Earth.
Mon, Jan 9, 2012 – Sun, July 1, 2012 Narrated by Academy Award winner Morgan Freeman, Born to be Wild is an inspiring story of love, dedication, and the remarkable bond between humans and animals.
Always on View at the American Museum of Natural History
Ongoing Dinosaurs, meteorites and gems, mammals preserved in realistic dioramas, ocean life and exhibition halls that explore the world’s traditional cultures are just some of the scores of subjects on view 363 days a year.