What do you do with more than 130 arsenic-tinged taxidermied animals with significant historical and academic value, languishing in a now-closed museum that may or may not be a public health hazard?
With a 31-foot-wide oculus lens, the Gulf Stream Tank is the focal point of the Frost Museum of Science’s new downtown location. When the museum opens next month, this Cyclops-esque window will allow ...
TUCSON, Ariz. (KGUN) — The staff at the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum are able to help keep their animals cool, even when the temperature soars well above 100 degrees. They use everything from misters, ...
In Next of Kin at the Harvard Museum of Natural History, artist Christina Seely repurposes natural history specimens for an emotional exhibition about animal extinction. Installation view of the ...
Crocodiles, monkeys, tigers, zebras and dozens of other taxidermy animals will move to new homes after concerns about arsenic exposure forced the closure of the South Dakota museum where they had been ...
The new exhibit showcases some of the earliest examples of animal armor in simple creatures, but a lot has changed in those 500 million years. “This exhibit starts with some of the earliest armor ...
BRYCE CANYON — Right off of state Route 12, as you are nearing the turn to go to Bryce Canyon National Park, sits a small but mighty museum. The Bryce Canyon Wildlife Conservation Museum is something ...
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