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Check out the exciting exhibitions and programs at the Museum this fall for you and your students! Plan your visit...
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Mammals are everywhere, from the frigid Arctic ice to the hottest desert. This exhibition explores the surprising and sometimes bizarre world of extinct and living mammals. Come and meet your relatives!
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Join narrator Whoopi Goldberg on a journey 13 billion years into the past, when the first stars were born. Then travel to the present to visit our fiery Sun, and 5 billion years into the future to see it transform into a red giant.
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The butterflies are back! Celebrate the eleventh annual return of this re-created tropical forest environment filled with over 500 live butterflies.
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Back by popular demand, this delightful exhibition of live animals introduces visitors to the colorful and richly diverse world of frogs. Download this Family Guide to help you navigate the exhibition.
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A spectacular and extremely rare textile, woven from golden-colored silk thread produced by more than one million spiders in Madagascar, goes on display in the Museum's Grand Gallery.
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This new IMAX film follows the epic struggles of an amazing array of sea life off the coast of South Africa, where the annual sardine migration arrives and brings with it dramatic consequences.
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Beavers follows a pair of these industrious creatures as they leave the shelter of their colony in search of a site to build a new home. The film chronicles their daily activities and the dangers they face as they find a site, build a dam, and start their own family.
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October 2009
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Museum Programs
Discover how to connect the Museum's world-renowned scientific collections and exhibition halls to the classroom.
These 45-minute tours start in one of the Museum's permanent halls and then connect to other halls.
A day-long class designed to help K–12 educators focus on ways to connect Museum resources to standards and core curricula.
Join us for an evening of activities that include a catered reception, an introduction to the exhibition by curator Dr. John Flynn, and the sharing of curriculum materials and other resources to support teaching science and field trips with students.
150 years ago, Charles Darwin published his revolutionary work On The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection. Join us as we celebrate the progress in the field of evolutionary biology since Darwin's time.
More museum programs...
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