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The Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation is Now Open 

American Museum of Natural History
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Share in the excitement of discovery with new exhibition galleries, an immersive experience, classrooms, and more. Encounter spectacular architecture in a distinctive new building, designed by Studio Gang, that connects the Museum’s campus and creates a new entrance on Columbus Avenue. The Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation is now open!
For more about the Gilder Center, visit amnh.org/gildercenter.
© American Museum of Natural History, New York

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31 янв 2023

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Комментарии : 13   
@colleenfoley8074
@colleenfoley8074 Год назад
Oh WOW; it came out beautiful.
@giovannytravels5677
@giovannytravels5677 Год назад
Going this Saturday Can’t wait
@AmericanMuseumofNaturalHistory
Hope you have a great time!
@andrewnathan2903
@andrewnathan2903 Год назад
is this included in general admission?
@ilttpvvm
@ilttpvvm 11 месяцев назад
It is, except for the live butterfly exhibit and the 360-degree immersive exhibit “Invisible Worlds”-one must pay extra to see them.
@josephdragan7734
@josephdragan7734 Год назад
Has an opening date been set?
@ashleysmusic8396
@ashleysmusic8396 Год назад
This. I’m heading to NY in a month, would love to visit this place
@LutzHeidelberg
@LutzHeidelberg Год назад
@@ashleysmusic8396 Same. Seems no news.
@theyorker
@theyorker Год назад
May 4, 2023 is then
@IndriidaeNT
@IndriidaeNT 6 месяцев назад
My family and I visited the American Museum of Natural History in April 2023 and June 2023 during our trips to New York City there at the time and at the AMNH we visited some of my favorite permanent exhibits there like The Hall of Saurischian Dinosaurs, The Hall of Ornithischian Dinosaurs, The Hall of Vertebrate Origins (Which now has an entrance to the new Glider Center and it’s research library.), The Hall of Primitive Mammals, The Hall of Advanced Mammals, The Titanosaur (Patagotitan), which are the fossil halls my favorites obviously since I love dinosaurs, paleontology and prehistoric life as well as The Hall of African Mammals, The Hall of North American Mammals, The World of Birds, The Hall of Primates, The Rose Center for Earth and Space, the newly renovated Northwest Coast Hall, The Hall of Human Origins, The Hall of Ocean Life, The Hall of Gems and Minerals (Which now has an entrance to The Glider Center), The Hall of Pacific Peoples (Which also now has an entrance to the Glider Center.), The Hall of Mexico and Central America and The Hall of South American Peoples (Which also now has an entrance to the Glider Center.) We also visited the new exhibits at the museum which me and my family also adored like Sharks, a traveling exhibit (Located next to The Hall of Reptiles and Amphibians where T. rex: The Ultimate Predator and Our Senses: The Immersive Experience used to be in 2017 to 2021.) focusing on sharks, rays and other cartilaginous fishes prehistoric and modern-day and their natural history, marine biology and lifestyles and how most people misunderstand sharks as vicious man-eating machines but I picture them as a group of organisms critical to the habitats and ecosystems where they live. We also visited the new Glider Center recently installed and added to the museum focusing on different fields of study that people who study animals and the natural world study like paleontology, marine biology, entomology, astronomy and astrophysics, mammalogy and ornithology. We also watched Sergenti, a twenty minute nature documentary focusing on African mammals and other animals living in Serengeti in Africa which was just as great as the BBC Earth nature documentary series with a similar premise that I watched on Discovery Plus. The Glider Center was an interesting new permanent exhibit added to the AMNH and it’s new museum entrance and exits/entrances from The Hall of Vertebrate Origins, The Hall of African Peoples, The Hall of Pacific Peoples and Hall of South American Peoples were interesting but the only exhibits there I actually adored where the part where you can see behind the scenes at the museum and where the storage place where all the specimens and artifacts at the museum are kept just as they were in the AMNH shelf life series and the Butterfly Vivarium which was a mini tropical Rainforest home to a collection of species of butterflies, monarch butterflies, tiger swallowtail butterflies, blue morpho butterflies, postman butterflies and painted lady butterflies as well as atlas moths and chrysalises that the butterflies emerge from and the Insect Exhibit explaining information in the entomology and societies and lifestyles of insects and also featured live leaf-cutter ants, silkworms some of home became silk cocoons and pupas to become silk moths (The silk cocoons and pupas might be moved to the Butterfly Vivarium so the silk moths could emerge from the cocoons and pupas and live in the Vivarium with the butterflies and atlas moths.) was interesting too. But one exhibit my family and I visited at the Glider Center Invisible Worlds and was the least interesting Invisible Worlds which I thought was going to be about single-celled organisms like amoebas, paraciecum, bacteria, viruses, Protozoa and fungi and algae and tardigrades and how they are critical to the microscopic habitats and ecosystems where they live or phytoplankton and zooplankton and how they are responsible for starting ocean food webs and food chains or how toothed whales use echolocation to find fish and prey to eat but it in reality was just about how all life on Earth, animals, fungi and plants connect to one another and was actually very boring although the part with the Poison dart frogs and how all life in the Amazon rainforest animals and plants live together as an ecosystem was really interesting.
@IndriidaeNT
@IndriidaeNT 6 месяцев назад
I would give that exhibit a five out of ten stars rating and the rest of the exhibits at the AMNH including the Glider Center and its butterfly Vivarium and insect exhibit and behind the scenes look at the specimens and artifacts in the storage room a ten out of ten rating. The AMNH has something for everyone. The architecture at the Glider Center was also incredible but my family and I all agreed that from our point of views that kind of architecture would go so much better at an art museum like the Museum of Modern Art and Metropolitan Museum of Art that we visited in our New York City trip and not a natural history museum like the American Museum of Natural History. Don’t you agree? I recently learned from the AMNH website that two new exhibits are coming to the AMNH, Blue Whales: Giant Screen Film and The Secret World of Elephants, The Secret World of Elephants focuses on some people and naturalists observing African elephants and Asian elephants and their daily lives and families and how they breed in the African savanna and tropical rainforests of Asia and Blue Whales: Giant Screen Film focuses on some marine biologists observing and studying some blue whales and humpback whales in the oceans around the world making those two exhibits similar to Secrets of the Whales and Secrets of the Elephants both the books and nature documentary series from National Geographic. Me and my family and friends can’t wait to visit The Secret World of Elephants when it comes out at the AMNH and watch Blue Whales: Giant Screen Film when it comes out at the 3-D theater at the AMNH and will be one of my favorite Giant-screen films playing at the AMNH so far after Sea Lions: Life by a Whisker, Backyard Wilderness, Oceans: Our Blue Planet 3D, Beavers and Sergenti. But do you know what would make me really happy? If the AMNH ever made its first paleontology and dinosaurs exhibit since T. rex: The Ultimate Predator in 2019 to 2021, maybe one called Mongolia and China: A Haven for dinosaurs and pterosaurs and it is about the different dinosaurs and pterosaurs that lived in Mongolia in the Late Cretaceous like Tarbosaurus, Yutyrannus, Qianzhousaurus, Alectrosaurus and Alioramus which are all Tyrannosaurs, Velociraptor, Microraptor, Sirornithosaurus and Kuru Kulla which are all Dromaeosaurs, Citipati, Oviraptor, Gigantoraptor, Caudipteryx and Corythoraptor which are all Oviraptorosaurs, Therizinosaurus, Deinocherius and Gallimimus which are both Ornithomimds, Monokyus, Nemegetosaurus and Mongolian Titanosaurs which are both Titanosaurs and Sauropods, Protoceratops and Psittacosaurus which are both Ceratopsians, Prenocephale which is a Pachycephalosaur, Barsboldia and Saurolophus and Parasaurolophus which are all hadrosaurs, Tarchia which is an Anklyosaur and Gobi Azhdarchids which are pterosaurs and Nemegtabaatar, Eomaia and Repenomamus which are all early mammals and information on their lifestyles, natural history, paleontology, fossil discoveries, breeding, appearances and info on the Central Asiatic Expeditions led by Roy Champan Andrews, the AMNH/Mongolian expeditions led by Mark Norell and Polish-Mongolian expeditions that discovered all these species through fossils through life-sized models of all these listed species, their fossils and fossil casts, paleoart, dioramas, hands-in-interactives, a projection of all those listed species in Mongolia in the Late Cretaceous, a shadow theater, a VR experience similar to T. Rex Skeleton crew from T. rex: The Ultimate Predator and clips from Planet Dinosaur (2011), Chased by Dinosaurs (2002), Prehistoric Planet (2022-2023) and Life on Our Planet (2023) using elements from T. rex: The Ultimate Predator, The World’s Largest Dinosaurs, Dinosaurs: Among Us and Pterosaurs: Flight in the Age of Dinosaurs and featured as a permanent exhibit in the Glider Center. Does this sound like a great idea? Or heck even feature several new permanent exhibitions at the Glider Center and Rose Center for Earth and Space at the AMNH based on Wolf Haven, The World of Dinosaurs: An Illustrated Tour, Secrets of the Whales, Dinosaurs: New Visions of a Lost World, Secrets of the Elephants, Mesozoic Art: Dinosaurs in Art, The Hidden World of the Fox, Innumerable Insects, Gems and Crystals, Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Life, Titanosaur: Discovering the World’s Largest Dinosaur, Whales and Dolphins Encyclopedia, Dinosaurs in 25 Discoveries, The Great Book of Ancient Egypt, Aztec and Maya, Before Columbus, The Private Family Tree, Hubble Legacy, Mars, Stars and Planets, The World of Primates, Wildlife of the World, The Photo Ark books, Dinosaurs: The Grand Tour and The End of the Megafauna featuring paleoart, photographs, models, fossils, taxidermies, artifacts, specimens, wax figures, hands-on-interactive, clips from nature documentaries and videos of all the species, themes and subjects from those books and information on their paleontology and much more. The AMNH could also use a new traveling or permanent exhibit called The Animals of South America including the models, taxidermies, dioramas, specimens, art in nature of and sculptures of animals, birds, mammals, reptiles, insects and fish that live in South America including macaws, toucans, new world monkeys, three-toed sloths, giant anteaters, blue morpho butterflies, postman butterflies, caimans, poison dart frogs and llamas and lesser rheas from the Amazon rainforest and Andes Mountains and live members of these species and information on their natural history, entomology, mammalogy, ornithology and a section focusing on the Yanomami, Inca empire, Moche, Nazca, Chimu and Chancay and other South American cultures with their artifacts, wax sculptures and artworks similar to what The Hall of South American Peoples does and a combination of a Mammal Hall and Human Origins and World Cultures Hall at the AMNH or a hall called the Hall of Madagascar Mammals with the dioramas, taxidermies and models of mammals from Madagascar like ring-tailed lemurs, red-bellied lemurs, ruffed lemurs, bamboo lemurs, sifaka lemurs, indris, mouse lemurs, aye-ayes, dwarf lemurs, tenrecs and fossas as well as chameleons and Madagascar hissing cockroaches and info on their natural history and entomology and a section about the Malagsy and human cultures of Madagascar called The Hall of Madagascar Peoples
@IndriidaeNT
@IndriidaeNT 6 месяцев назад
with artifacts, wax sculptures of humans and anthropology information on those cultures. Or maybe feature an exhibit focusing on Felines like big cats, domestic cats, caracals, servals and lynxes etc. called Felines: The beautiful cats with taxidermies, dioramas, and natural history and lifestyle information on those felines (big cats, domestic cats, caracals, servals and lynxes) and live big cats, domestic cats, caracals, servals, lynxes, etc. and a sister exhibit focusing on Canines like foxes (Red foxes, fennec foxes, Arctic foxes and manned foxes.), wolves (Northwestern wolves, eastern wolves and Arctic wolves), coyotes and domestic dogs called Canines: Man’s best friend with taxidermies, dioramas, and natural history and lifestyle information on those Canines like foxes, wolves, coyotes and domestic dogs or even have a nature documentary play in the 3-D theater focusing on red foxes, fennec foxes, Arctic foxes, northwestern wolves and Arctic wolves and eastern wolves and their lives and behaviors in North America, Europe and Africa and all the animals that lived alongside them or have the AMNH have a traveling exhibit and permanent exhibit in the Glider Center focusing on African cats like cheetahs and African lions and the animals living alongside them like Thomson’s gazelles, African elephants, meerkats, caracls, servals, banded mongooses, zebras, giraffes, hippopotamus, nile crocodiles, wildebeest and olive baboons and elephant shrews or a traveling exhibit and permanent exhibit focusing on red foxes and northwestern wolves living in North America also based on The Hidden World of the Fox and The Alpha Female Wolf as well as the animals that lived alongside them like caribou, American bison, pronghorn, Orcas, bald eagles, raccoons, rabbits, hares, opossums, Canada lynxes, black bears, grizzly bears and chipmunks, squirrels, woodpeckers, owls, blue jays, bobcats, cougars, cardinals, monarch butterflies, tiger swallowtail butterflies and beavers, North American river otters, eastern wolves and beavers. Does that sound like a great idea? What if the AMNH also ever had permanent exhibits or traveling exhibits based on Prehistoric Planet (2022-2023) and Life on Our Planet (2023) and Our Planet with the dioramas, information on the natural history, paleontology and marine biology, taxidermies, life-sized models, fossils and paleoart and nature in art of all those species from those nature documentaries and hands-on-interactives, VR experiences, shadow theaters and projections of those species in their natural habitats. Does that sound like a great idea? Leave your replies in the comments.
@daibhidhcaidh8769
@daibhidhcaidh8769 Год назад
It's hideous.
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