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American Museum of Natural History
American Museum of Natural History
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The American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) is a natural history museum on the Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York City.[5] Located in Theodore Roosevelt Park, across the street from Central Park, the museum complex comprises 21 interconnected buildings housing 45 permanent exhibition halls, in addition to a planetarium and a library. The museum collections contain about 32 million specimens[6] of plants, animals, fungi, fossils, minerals, rocks, meteorites, human remains, and human cultural artifacts, as well as specialized collections for frozen tissue and genomic and astrophysical data, of which only a small fraction can be displayed at any given time. The museum occupies more than 2,500,000 sq ft (232,258 m2). AMNH has a full-time scientific staff of 225, sponsors over 120 special field expeditions each year,[7] and averages about five million visits annually.[8]

Key Information

The AMNH is a private 501(c)(3) organization.[5] The naturalist Albert S. Bickmore devised the idea for the American Museum of Natural History in 1861, and, after several years of advocacy, the museum opened within Central Park's Arsenal on May 22, 1871. The museum's first purpose-built structure in Theodore Roosevelt Park was designed by Calvert Vaux and J. Wrey Mould and opened on December 22, 1877. Numerous wings have been added over the years, including the main entrance pavilion (named for Theodore Roosevelt) in 1936 and the Rose Center for Earth and Space in 2000.

History

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Founding

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Early efforts

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The naturalist Albert S. Bickmore devised the idea for the American Museum of Natural History in 1861.[9] At the time, he was studying in Cambridge, Massachusetts, at Louis Agassiz's Museum of Comparative Zoology.[9][10] Observing that many European natural history museums were in populous cities, Bickmore wrote in a biography: "Now New York is our city of greatest wealth and therefore probably the best location for the future museum of natural history for our whole land."[9] For several years, Bickmore lobbied for the establishment of a natural history museum in New York.[11] Upon the end of the American Civil War, Bickmore asked numerous prominent New Yorkers, such as William E. Dodge Jr., to sponsor his museum.[12][13] Although Dodge himself could not fund the museum at the time, he introduced the naturalist to Theodore Roosevelt Sr., the father of future U.S. president Theodore Roosevelt.[12][14]

Calls for a natural history museum increased after Barnum's American Museum burned down in 1868.[12] Eighteen prominent New Yorkers wrote a letter to the Central Park Commission that December, requesting the creation of a natural history museum in Central Park.[10][15][16] Central Park commissioner Andrew Haswell Green indicated his support for the project in January 1869.[16][15] A board of trustees was created for the museum. The next month, Bickmore and Joseph Hodges Choate drafted a charter for the museum, which the board of trustees approved without any changes. It was in this charter that the "American Museum of Natural History" name was first used.[17] Bickmore said he wanted the museum's name to reflect his "expectation that our museum will ultimately become the leading institution of its kind in our country", similar to the British Museum.[17] Before the museum was established, Bickmore needed to secure approval from Boss Tweed, leader of the powerful and corrupt Tammany Hall political organization. The legislation to establish the American Museum of Natural History had to be signed by John Thompson Hoffman, the governor of New York, who was associated with Tweed.[18]

Creation and new building

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Hoffman signed the legislation creating the museum on April 6, 1869,[19][20] with John David Wolfe as its first president.[21][a] Subsequently, the chairman of the AMNH's executive committee asked Green if the museum could use the top two stories of Central Park's Arsenal, and Green approved the request in January 1870.[20] Insect specimens were placed on the lower level of the Arsenal,[22] while stones, fossils, mammals, birds, fish, and reptiles were placed on the upper level.[23] The museum opened within the Arsenal on May 22, 1871.[23][24] The AMNH became popular in the following years. The Arsenal location had 856,773 visitors in the first nine months of 1876 alone, more than the British Museum had recorded for all of 1874.[25]

Drawing of the AMNH south facade
Drawing of the AMNH south facade, publication 1916
This wing was built from 1874 to 1877.

Meanwhile, the AMNH's directors had identified Manhattan Square (bounded by Eighth Avenue/Central Park West, 81st Street, Ninth Avenue/Columbus Avenue, and 77th Street) as a site for a permanent structure.[10][26] Several prominent New Yorkers had raised $500,000 to fund the construction of the new building. The city's park commissioners then reserved Manhattan Square as the site of the permanent museum, and another $200,000 was raised for the building fund.[27] Numerous dignitaries and officials, including U.S. president Ulysses S. Grant, attended the museum's groundbreaking ceremony on June 3, 1874.[28][29][30]

The museum opened on December 22, 1877, with a ceremony attended by U.S. president Rutherford B. Hayes.[31][25] The old exhibits were removed from the Arsenal in 1878, and the AMNH was debt-free by the next year.[32]

19th century

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Originally, the AMNH was accessed by a temporary bridge that crossed a ditch, and it was closed during Sundays. The museum's trustees voted in May 1881 to complete the approaches from Central Park,[33] and work began later that year.[34] The landscape changes were nearly complete by mid-1882,[35] and a bridge over Central Park West opened that November.[36][37] At this point, the AMNH's Manhattan Square building and the Arsenal could not physically fit any more objects, and the existing facilities, such as the 100-seat lecture hall, were insufficient to accommodate demand.[38] The trustees began discussing the possibility of opening the museum on Sundays in May 1885,[39] and the state legislature approved a bill permitting Sunday operations the next year.[40][41] Despite advocacy from the working class,[42] the trustees opposed Sunday operations because it would be expensive to do so.[43] At the time, the museum was open to the general public on Wednesdays through Saturdays, and it was open exclusively to members on Mondays and Tuesdays.[44] The museum's collections continued to grow during the 1880s,[32] and it hosted various lectures through the 19th century.[45]

With several departments having been crowded out of the original building, New York state legislators introduced bills to expand the AMNH in early 1887;[46] thousands of teachers endorsed the legislation.[47] City parks engineer Montgomery A. Kellogg was directed to prepare plans for landscaping the site.[48] In March 1888, the trustees approved an entrance pavilion at the center of the 77th Street elevation.[49][50] The New York City Board of Estimate began soliciting bids from general contractors in late 1889.[51][52] Many of the objects and specimens in the museum's collection could not be displayed until the annex was opened.[53] The original building was refurbished during 1890,[54] and the museum's library was transferred to the west wing that year.[55] The AMNH's trustees considered opening the museum on Sundays by February 1892[56] and stopped charging admission that July.[57][58] The museum began Sunday operations in August,[59] and the southern entrance pavilion opened that November.[60][61] Even with the new wing, there was still not enough space for the museum's collection.[32] The city's Park Board approved a new lecture hall in January 1893,[62][63] but the hall was postponed that May in favor of a wing extending east on 77th Street.[64][65] A contract to furnish the east wing was awarded in June 1894.[66]

When the east wing was nearly completed in February 1895, the AMNH's trustees asked state legislators for $200,000 to build a wing extending west on 77th Street.[67][68] The east wing was still being furnished by August;[69] its ground floor opened that December.[70] The museum's funds and collections continued to grow during this time.[71] A hall of mammals opened within the museum in November 1896.[72][73] That year, the AMNH received approval to extend the east wing northward along Central Park West, creating an L-shaped structure.[74] Plans for an expanded east wing were approved in June 1897,[75] and a contract was awarded two months later.[76][77] The museum's director Morris K. Jesup also sponsored worldwide expeditions to obtain objects for the collection.[78] By mid-1898, the west wing, the expanded east wing, and a lecture hall at the center of the museum were underway;[79] however, the project encountered delays due to a lack of city funding.[80] The west and east wings, with several exhibit halls, were nearly complete by late 1899, but the lecture hall had been delayed.[81] A hall dedicated to ancient Mexican art opened that December.[82][83]

20th century

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1900s to 1940s

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The museum's 1,350-seat lecture hall opened in October 1900, as did the Native American and Mexican halls in the west wing.[84][85] During the 1900s, the AMNH sponsored several expeditions to grow its collection, including a trip to Mexico,[86] a trip to collect fauna from the Pacific Northwest,[87] a trip to collect art in China,[88] and an expedition to collect rocks in local caves.[89] One such exhibition yielded a brontosaurus skeleton, which was the centerpiece of the dinosaur hall that opened in February 1905.[90][91]

In the early 1920s, museum president Henry Fairfield Osborn planned a new entrance for the AMNH, which was to contain a memorial to Theodore Roosevelt.[92] Also around that time, the New York state government formed a commission to study the feasibility of a Roosevelt memorial.[92][93] After a dispute over whether to put the memorial in Albany or in New York City,[94] the government of New York City offered a site next to the AMNH for consideration.[95] The commission rejected a "conventional Greek mausoleum" design, instead opting to design a triumphal arch and hall in a Roman style.[92] In 1925, the AMNH's trustees hosted an architectural design competition, selecting John Russell Pope to design the memorial hall.[96][97] Construction began in 1929,[98] and the trustees approved final plans the next year.[99] J. Harry McNally was the general contractor.[100] Roosevelt's cousin, U.S. president Franklin D. Roosevelt, dedicated the memorial on January 19, 1936.[101][102]

1950s to 1990s

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The original building was later known as "Wing A". During the 1950s, the top floor was renovated into a library, being redecorated with what Christopher Gray of The New York Times described as "dropped ceilings and the other usual insults".[103] The ten-story Childs Frick Building, which contained the AMNH's fossil collection, was added to the museum in the 1970s.[104][105]

The architect Kevin Roche and his firm Roche-Dinkeloo have been responsible for the master planning of the museum since the 1990s.[106] Various renovations to both the interior and exterior have been carried out. Renovations to the Dinosaur Hall were undertaken beginning in 1991,[106] and Roche-Dinkeloo designed the eight-story AMNH Library in 1992.[107] The museum's Rose Center for Earth and Space was completed in 2000.[108][109]

21st century

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The old Romanesque Revival-style 77th Street entrance.
The central atrium of the Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation.

In 2001, the museum's lecture hall was renamed the Samuel J. and Ethel LeFrak Theater, after Samuel J. LeFrak donated US$8 million to the AMNH.[110] The museum's south facade, spanning 77th Street from Central Park West to Columbus Avenue, was cleaned and repaired, re-emerging in 2009. Steven Reichl, a spokesman for the museum, said that work would include restoring 650 black-cherry window frames and stone repairs. The museum's consultant on the latest renovation was Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates, Inc., an architectural and engineering firm with headquarters in Northbrook, Illinois.[111] The museum also restored the mural in Roosevelt Memorial Hall in 2010.[112]

Richard Gilder Center

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In 2014, the museum published plans for a $325 million, 195,000 sq ft (18,100 m2) annex, the Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation, on the Columbus Avenue side. It was named after stockbroker and philanthropist Richard Gilder.[113]

On October 11, 2016, the Landmarks Preservation Commission unanimously approved the expansion. Construction of the Gilder Center, which was expected to break ground the next year following design development and Environmental Impact Statement stages, would entail demolition of three museum buildings built between 1874 and 1935.[114] The museum filed plans for the expansion in August 2017,[115] but due to community opposition, construction did not start until June 2019.[116][117]

On May 4, 2023, the Gilder Center opened,[118][119] and the museum had 1.5 million visitors over the next three months.[120] In 2025, the AMNH began providing free "Discoverer" memberships to Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program recipients.[121][122]

Native remains

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In late 2023, the museum announced that it would stop displaying human remains from its collection.[123][124] Despite the 1990 passage of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), as late as 2023, the AMNH held an estimated 1,900 Native American remains that had not been repatriated.[125]

In January 2024, the museum closed a number of displays and the AMNH's Eastern Woodlands and Great Plains halls, or about 10,000 square feet.[126][127] The museum agreed to repatriate the remains that July.[128]

Original structure

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This building was completed by the end of the 19th century. The buildings beside this one would be complete in the early 20th century. Currently, this building houses (first floor to fourth floor) the Grand Gallery, Birds of the World, Primates, and the Wallach Orientation Center.

The original Victorian Gothic building was designed by Calvert Vaux and J. Wrey Mould, both already closely identified with the architecture of Central Park.[129][130] Vaux and Mould's original plan was intended to complement the Metropolitan Museum of Art on the opposite side of Central Park.[130] The original building, as constructed, was at the center of the 77th Street frontage and measured 199 by 66 feet (61 by 20 m) across;[131] it featured a gallery measuring 112 feet (34 m) long200 ft (61 m) tall. This gallery contained a raised basement, three stories of exhibits, Venetian Gothic arches, and an attic with dormers and a slate roof.[25] The rear of the gallery included two towers: one containing a stairwell and the other containing curators' rooms.[131] The original structure still exists but is hidden from view by the many buildings in the complex that today occupy most of Manhattan Square.[129] The museum remains accessible through its 77th Street foyer, which has since been renamed the Grand Gallery.[132]

The full plan called for twelve pavilions similar in design to the original building. Eight pavilions would have been arranged as the sides of a square, while the remaining four would be perpendicular to each other in the interior of the square. There were to be eight towers along the perimeter of the square, as well as a 120 ft-wide (37 m) dome in the center, at the intersection of the four interior pavilions.[25][133][134] In each pavilion, there was to be a ground floor; the second floor was to contain a gallery; the third floor was to exhibit specimens; and the fourth floor was to be used for research.[26] Upon the intended completion of the master plan, the museum would measure 850 ft (260 m) from north to south and 650 ft (200 m) from west to east, including projections from the square.[25][133][134] The finished structure, with a ground area of over 18 acres (7.3 ha),[27][134] would have been the largest building in North America, as well as the largest museum building in the world.[130] The master plan was never fully realized;[135] by 2015, the museum consisted of 25 separate buildings that were poorly connected.[136]

The original building was soon eclipsed by the west and east wings of the southern frontage, designed by J. Cleaveland Cady as a brownstone neo-Romanesque structure.[111] It extends 700 ft (210 m) along West 77th Street,[137] with corner towers 150 ft (46 m) tall. Its pink brownstone and granite, similar to that found at Grindstone Island in the St. Lawrence River, came from quarries at Picton Island, New York.[138] The southern wing contains several halls ranging in size from 60 by 110 feet (18 m × 34 m) to 30 ft × 125 ft (9.1 m × 38.1 m).[60][61] At the ends of either wings are rounded turret-like towers.[79][81]

New York State Memorial to Theodore Roosevelt

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The main entrance hall on Central Park West is formally known as the New York State Memorial to Theodore Roosevelt. Completed by John Russell Pope in 1936, it is an over-scaled Beaux-Arts monument to former U.S. president Theodore Roosevelt.[93] The hall was originally supposed to have formed one end of an "Intermuseum Promenade" through Central Park, connecting with the Metropolitan Museum of Art to the east,[139] but the promenade was never completed.[140]

The memorial hall has a pink-granite facade, which is modeled after Roman arches.[98][141] In front of the hall on Central Park West is a terrace measuring 350 ft (110 m) long, as well as a series of steps. The main entrance consists of an arch measuring 60 ft (18 m) high.[98] The underside of the arch is a coffered granite vestibule, which leads to a bronze, glass, and marble screen.[98][142] On either side of the arch are niches that contain sculptures of a bison and a bear.[142] It is flanked by two pairs of columns, which are topped by figures of American explorers John James Audubon, Daniel Boone, Meriwether Lewis, and William Clark.[143][98][141] These figures were sculpted by James Earle Fraser[98] and are about 30 ft (9.1 m) high.[142] In the attic above the main archway, there is an inscription describing Roosevelt's accomplishments.[143][98] The words "Truth", "Knowledge", and "Vision" are carved into the entablature under this inscription.[143]

Fraser also designed an equestrian statue of Theodore Roosevelt, flanked by a Native American and an African American, which originally stood outside the memorial hall. In the 21st century, the statue generated controversy due to its subordinate depiction of these figures behind Roosevelt.[144][145] This prompted AMNH officials to announce in 2020 that they would remove the statue.[146][147] The statue was removed in January 2022 and will be on a long-term loan to the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library in North Dakota.[148][149]

The Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Hall is the main ticketing lobby.

The interior of the Memorial Hall measures 67 by 120 ft (20 by 37 m) across, with a barrel-vaulted ceiling measuring 100 ft (30 m) tall.[150][98][151][152] The ceiling contains octagonal coffers, while the floors are made of mosaic marble tiles.[151][153] The lowest 9 ft (2.7 m) of the walls are wainscoted in marble, above which the walls of the memorial hall are made of limestone. The top of each wall contains a marble band and a Corinthian entablature.[154] Each of the Memorial Hall's four sides contains two red-marble columns, each measuring 48 ft (15 m) tall and rising from a Botticino marble pedestal. There are rounded windows at clerestory level on the north and south walls.[154][153] William Andrew MacKay designed three 62 ft-wide (19 m) murals depicting important events in Roosevelt's life: the construction of the Panama Canal on the north wall, African exploration on the west wall, and the Treaty of Portsmouth on the south wall.[155][156] The east and west walls, contain four quotes from Roosevelt under the headings "Nature", "Manhood", "Youth", and "The State".[150][154][157]

The Memorial Hall originally connected to various classrooms, exhibition rooms, and a 600-person auditorium.[98][158] Directly underneath the Memorial Hall is an entrance to the 81st Street–Museum of Natural History station.[98] Today, the hall connects to the Akeley Hall of African Mammals and the Hall of Asian Mammals. The Memorial Hall contains four exhibits that describe Theodore Roosevelt's conservation activities in his youth, early adulthood, U.S. presidency, and post-presidency.[159]

Mammal halls

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Old World mammals

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Akeley Hall of African Mammals

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Akeley Hall of African Mammals
James L. Clark (right) and assistants mount specimens for the "Lions" diorama

Named after taxidermist Carl Akeley, the Akeley Hall of African Mammals is a two-story hall on the second floor, directly west of the Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Hall. It connects to the Hall of African Peoples to the west.[160] The Hall of African Mammals' 28 dioramas depict in meticulous detail the great range of ecosystems found in Africa and the mammals endemic to them. The centerpiece of the hall is a herd of eight African elephants in a characteristic 'alarmed' formation.[161] Though the mammals are typically the main feature in the dioramas, birds and flora of the regions are occasionally featured as well.[162] The hall in its current form was completed in 1936.[163][164]

The Hall of African Mammals was first proposed to the museum by Carl Akeley around 1909; he proposed 40 dioramas featuring the rapidly vanishing landscapes and animals of Africa. Daniel Pomeroy, a trustee of the museum and partner at J.P. Morgan & Co., offered investors the opportunity to accompany the museum's expeditions in Africa in exchange for funding.[165] Akeley began collecting specimens for the hall as early as 1909, famously encountering Theodore Roosevelt in the midst of the Smithsonian-Roosevelt African expedition.[166] On these early expeditions, Akeley was accompanied by his former apprentice in taxidermy, James L. Clark, and artist, William R. Leigh.[165] When Akeley returned to Africa to collect gorillas for the hall's first diorama, Clark remained behind and began scouring the country for artists to create the backgrounds. The eventual appearance of the first habitat groups impacted the design of other diorama halls, including Birds of the World, the Hall of North American Mammals, the Vernay Hall of Southeast Asian Mammals, and the Hall of Oceanic Life.[165]

Diorama of Bongo antelopes in the Hall of African Mammals

After Akeley's unexpected death during the Eastman-Pomeroy expedition in 1926, responsibility of the hall's completion fell to James L. Clark, who hired architectural artist James Perry Wilson in 1933 to assist Leigh in the painting of backgrounds. Wilson made many improvements on Leigh's techniques, including a range of methods to minimize the distortion caused by the dioramas' curved walls.[165] In 1936, William Durant Campbell, a wealthy board member with a desire to see Africa, offered to fund several dioramas if allowed to obtain the specimens himself. Clark agreed to this arrangement, resulting in the acquisition of numerous large specimens.[165][167] Kane joined Leigh, Wilson, and several other artists in completing the hall's remaining dioramas.[168] Though construction of the hall was completed in 1936,[163][164] the dioramas gradually opened between the mid-1920s and early 1940s.[168]

Hall of Asian Mammals

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Indian elephant in the Hall of Asian Mammals
Indian rhinoceros diorama in the Hall of Asian Mammals

The Hall of Asian Mammals, sometimes referred to as the Vernay-Faunthorpe Hall of Asian Mammals, is directly south of the Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Hall.[160] It contains 8 complete dioramas, 4 partial dioramas, and 6 habitat groups of mammals and locations from India, Nepal, Burma, and Malaysia. The hall opened in 1930 and, similar to the Akeley Hall of African Mammals, is centered around 2 Asian elephants. At one point, a giant panda and Siberian tiger were also part of the Hall's collection, originally intended to be part of an adjoining Hall of North Asian Mammals (planned in the current location of Stout Hall of Asian Peoples). These specimens can currently be seen in the Hall of Biodiversity.[161][170]

Specimens for the Hall of Asian Mammals were collected over six expeditions led by British-born antiques dealer Arthur S. Vernay and Col. John Faunthorpe (as noted by stylized plaques at both entrances). The expeditions were funded entirely by Vernay, who characterized the expense as a British tribute to American involvement in World War I.[171] The first Vernay-Faunthorpe expedition took place in 1922, when many of the animals Vernay was seeking, such as the Sumatran rhinoceros and Asiatic lion, were facing the possibility of extinction. Vernay made many appeals to regional authorities to obtain hunting permits;[172] in later museum-related expeditions headed by Vernay, these appeals helped the museum gain access to areas previously restricted to foreign visitors.[173] Artist Clarence C. Rosenkranz accompanied the Vernay-Faunthorpe expeditions as field artist and painted the majority of the diorama backgrounds in the hall.[174] These expeditions were also well documented in both photo and video, with enough footage of the first expedition to create a feature-length film, Hunting Tigers in India (1929).[175]

New World mammals

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Diorama of Alaska Peninsula brown bears in the Hall of North American Mammals

Bernard Family Hall of North American Mammals

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Alaska moose diorama in the Hall of North American Mammals

The Bernard Family Hall of North American Mammals is on the first floor, directly west of the Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Hall.[160] features 43 dioramas of various mammals of the American continent, north of tropical Mexico. Each diorama places focus on a particular species, ranging from the largest megafauna to the smaller rodents and carnivorans. Notable dioramas include the Alaskan brown bears looking at a salmon after they scared off an otter, a pair of wolves, a pair of Sonoran jaguars, and dueling bull Alaska moose.

The Hall of North American Mammals opened in 1942 with only ten dioramas.[176] Another 16 dioramas were added in 1963.[177] A massive restoration project began in late 2011 following a large donation from Jill and Lewis Bernard.[178][179] In October 2012 the hall was reopened as the Bernard Hall of North American Mammals.[180]

Hall of Small Mammals
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The Hall of Small Mammals is an offshoot of the Bernard Family Hall of North American Mammals, directly to the west of the latter.[160] There are several small dioramas featuring small mammals found throughout North America, including collared peccaries, Abert's squirrel, and a wolverine.

Birds, reptiles, and amphibian halls

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Sanford Hall of North American Birds

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The Cuthbert Rookery Diorama contains many of the birds once endangered by plume hunting.

The Sanford Hall of North American birds is a one-story hall on the third floor, between the Hall of Primates and Akeley Hall's second level.[160] There are over 20 dioramas depicting birds from across North America in their native habitats.[181] At the far end of the hall are two large murals by ornithologist and artist Louis Agassiz Fuertes.[182] The hall also has display cases devoted to large collections of warblers, owls, and raptors.

Conceived by museum ornithologist Frank Chapman, the Hall is named for Chapman's friend and amateur ornithologist Leonard C. Sanford, who partially funded the hall and also donated the entirety of his own bird specimen collection to the museum. Construction began on the hall's dioramas as early as 1902, and the dioramas opened in 1909. They were the first to be exhibited in the museum and are the oldest still on display.[183] The hall was refurbished in 1962.[184]

Although Chapman was not the first to create museum dioramas, he was the first to bring artists into the field with him in the hopes of capturing a specific location at a specific time. In contrast to the dramatic scenes that Akeley created for the African Hall, Chapman wanted his dioramas to evoke a scientific realism, ultimately serving as a historical record of habitats and species facing a high probability of extinction.[183] Each of Chapman's dioramas depicted a species, their nests, and 4 ft (1.2 m) of the surrounding habitat in each direction.[185]

Hall of Birds of the World

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The Hall of Birds of the World is on the south side of the second floor.[160] The global diversity of bird species is exhibited in this hall. 12 dioramas showcase various ecosystems around the world and provide a sample of the varieties of birds that live there. Example dioramas include South Georgia featuring king penguins and skuas, the East African plains featuring secretarybirds and bustards, and the Australian outback featuring honeyeaters, cockatoos, and kookaburras.[186]

Whitney Memorial Hall of Oceanic Birds

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The Whitney Memorial Wing, originally named after Harry Payne Whitney and comprising 750,000 birds, opened in 1939.[187] Later known as the Hall of Oceanic Birds, it was completed and dedicated in 1953.[188][189] It was founded by Frank Chapman and Leonard C. Sanford, originally museum volunteers, who had gone forward with creation of a hall to feature birds of the Pacific islands. The hall was designed as a completely immersive collection of dioramas, including a circular display featuring birds-of-paradise.[190] In 1998, the Butterfly Conservatory was installed inside the hall.[191]

Hall of Reptiles and Amphibians

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The Hall of Reptiles and Amphibians is near the southeast corner of the third floor.[160] It serves as an introduction to herpetology, with many exhibits detailing reptile evolution, anatomy, diversity, reproduction, and behavior. Notable exhibits include a Komodo dragon group, an American alligator, Lonesome George, the last Pinta Island tortoise, and poison dart frogs.[192]

The Komodo dragon diorama featuring a group feeding on a wild boar carcass in the Hall of Reptiles and Amphibians.

In 1926, W. Douglas Burden, F.J. Defosse, and Emmett Reid Dunn collected specimens of the Komodo Dragon for the museum. Burden's chapter "The Komodo Dragon", in Look to the Wilderness, describes the expedition, the habitat, and the behavior of the dragon.[193] The hall opened in 1927[194] and was rebuilt from 1969 to 1977 at a cost of $1.3 million.[195]

Biodiversity and environmental halls

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Hall of Biodiversity

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The Hall of Biodiversity is underneath the Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Hall.[160] It opened in May 1998. The hall primarily contains exhibits and objects highlighting the concept of biodiversity, the interactions between living organisms, and the negative impacts of extinction on biodiversity.[196][197] The hall includes a 2,500 sq ft (230 m2) diorama depicting the Dzanga-Sangha Special Reserve rainforest with over 160 animal and plant species.[197][198] The diorama shows the rainforest in three states: pristine, altered by human activity, and destroyed by human activity.[196][197] Another attraction in the hall is "The Spectrum of Habitats", a video wall displaying footage of nine ecosystems. There is a "Transformation Wall", containing information and stories detailing changes to biodiversity, and a "Solutions Wall", containing suggestions on how to increase biodiversity.[197]

Hall of North American Forests

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The Mixed Deciduous Forest diorama

The Hall of North American Forests is a one-story hall on the museum's first floor in between the Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Hall and the Warburg Hall of New York State Environments.[160] It contains ten dioramas depicting a range of forest types from across North America as well as several displays on forest conservation and tree health. The hall was constructed under the guidance of botanist Henry K. Svenson[199] and opened in 1958.[200] Each diorama specifically lists both the location and exact time of year depicted.[199] Trees and plants featured in the dioramas are constructed of a combination of art supplies and actual bark and other specimens collected in the field. The entrance to the hall features a cross section from the Mark Twain Tree, 1,400-year-old sequoia taken from the King's River grove on the west flank of the Sierra Mountains in 1891.[201]

The Juniper Forest diorama

Warburg Hall of New York State Environments

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"Spring" display in Warburg Hall

Warburg Hall of New York State Environments is a one-story hall on the museum's ground floor in between the Hall of North American Forests and the Grand Hall.[160] Based on the town of Pine Plains in Dutchess County, New York, the hall gives a multi-faceted presentation of the eco-systems typical of New York.[202][203] Aspects covered include soil types, seasonal changes, and the impact of both humans and nonhuman animals on the environment. It is named for the German-American philanthropist Felix M. Warburg and opened on May 14, 1951,[203] as the Warburg Memorial Hall of General Ecology.[204] It has changed little since and is now frequently regarded for its retro-modern styling.[205]

Milstein Hall of Ocean Life

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Model of a blue whale in the Milstein Family Hall of Ocean Life

The Milstein Hall of Ocean Life is in the southeastern quadrant of the first floor, west of the Hall of Biodiversity.[160] It focuses on marine biology, botany and marine conservation. The center of the hall contains a 94 ft (29 m)-long blue whale model.[206] The upper level of the hall exhibits the vast array of ecosystems present in the ocean. Dioramas compare and contrast the life in these different settings including kelp forests, mangroves, coral reefs, the bathypelagic, among others. It attempts to show how vast and varied the oceans are while encouraging common themes throughout.[207] The lower half of the hall consists of 15 large dioramas of larger marine organisms.[208] It is on this level that the famous "Squid and the Whale" diorama sits, depicting a hypothetical fight between the two creatures.[207] Other notable exhibits in this hall include the two-level Andros Coral Reef Diorama.[208][209]

In 1910, museum president Henry F. Osborn proposed the construction of a large building in the museum's southeast courtyard to house a new Hall of Ocean Life in which "models and skeletons of whales" would be exhibited.[210] The hall opened in 1924[208] and was renovated in 1962.[184] In 1969, a renovation gave the hall a more explicit focus on oceanic megafauna, including the addition of a lifelike blue whale model to replace a popular steel and papier-mâché whale model that had hung in the Biology of Mammals hall. Richard Van Gelder oversaw the creation of the hall in its current incarnation.[210] The hall was renovated once again in 2003, this time with environmentalism and conservation being the main focal points, and was renamed after developer Paul Milstein and AMNH board member Irma Milstein. The 2003 renovation included refurbishment of the famous blue whale, suspended high above the 19,000 sq ft (1,800 m2) exhibit floor; updates to the 1930s and 1960s dioramas; and electronic displays.[185]

Human origins and cultural halls

[edit]

Cultural halls

[edit]

Stout Hall of Asian Peoples

[edit]

The Stout Hall of Asian Peoples is a one-story hall on the museum's second floor in between the Hall of Asian Mammals and Birds of the World.[160] It is named for Gardner D. Stout, a former president of the museum, and was primarily organized by Walter A. Fairservis, a longtime museum archaeologist. Opened in 1980, Stout Hall is the museum's largest anthropological hall and contains artifacts acquired by the museum between 1869 and the mid-1970s.[211] Many famous expeditions sponsored by the museum are associated with the artifacts in the hall, including the Roy Chapman Andrews expeditions in Central Asia and the Vernay-Hopwood Chindwin expedition.[212]

Stout Hall has two sections: Ancient Eurasia, a small section devoted to the evolution of human civilization in Eurasia, and Traditional Asia, a much larger section containing cultural artifacts from across the Asian continent. The latter section is organized to geographically correspond with two major trade routes of the Silk Road. Like many of the museum's exhibition halls, the artifacts in Stout Hall are presented in a variety of ways including exhibits, miniature dioramas, and five full-scale dioramas. Notable exhibits in the Ancient Eurasian section include reproductions from the archaeological sites of Teshik-Tash and Çatalhöyük, as well as a full size replica of a Hammurabi Stele. The Traditional Asia section contains areas devoted to major Asian countries, such as Japan, China, Tibet, and India, while also including a vast array of smaller Asian tribes including the Ainu, Semai, and Yakut.[213]

Hall of African Peoples

[edit]
Diorama depicting Pokot methods of animal husbandry
Spiritual costumes from a variety of African tribes

The Hall of African Peoples is behind Akeley Hall of African Mammals and underneath Sanford Hall of North American Birds.[160] It is organized by the four major ecosystems found in Africa: River Valley, Grasslands, Forest-Woodland, and Desert. Each section presents artifacts and exhibits of the peoples native to the ecosystems throughout Africa. The hall contains three dioramas and notable exhibits include a large collection of spiritual costumes on display in the Forest-Woodland section. Uniting the sections of the hall is a multi-faceted comparison of African societies based on hunting and gathering, cultivation, and animal domestication. Each type of society is presented in a historical, political, spiritual, and ecological context. A small section of African diaspora spread by the slave trade is also included.[214] Tribes and civilizations featured include:

Hall of Mexico and Central America

[edit]
Zapotec burial urns from Monte Albán

The Hall of Mexico and Central America is a one-story hall on the museum's second floor behind Birds of the World and before the Hall of South American Peoples.[160] It presents archaeological artifacts from a broad range of pre-Columbian civilizations that once existed across Mesoamerica, including the Maya, Olmec, Zapotec, and Aztec. Because the great majority of the written records of these civilizations did not survive the Spanish conquest, the overarching aim of the hall is to piece together what it is possible to know about them from the artifacts alone.

The museum has displayed pre-Columbian artifacts since its opening, only a short time after the discovery of the civilizations by archaeologists, with its first hall dedicated to the subject opening in 1899.[215] As the museum's collection grew, the hall underwent major renovations in 1944 and again in 1970 when it re-opened in its current form.[216][217] Notable artifacts on display include the Kunz Axe and a full-scale replica of Tomb 104 from the Monte Albán archaeological site, originally displayed at the 1939 World's Fair.

South American Peoples

[edit]

The Hall of South American Peoples is a one-story hall on the northwestern corner of the second floor, next to the Hall of Mexico and Central America. The hall was first opened on the third floor in 1904, and exhibited archaeological objects, including mummies, from Peru, Colombia, Bolivia, and the West Indies. In 1931, the hall was expanded and relocated to the second floor under the direction of curators Ronald Olson and W.C. Bennett. The new hall included a recreation of a Chilean copper mine, and later, a temporary hall titled the Men of the Montaña, which featured Peruvian cultural artifacts from the Cashibo, and Panoan peoples.[218] In 1989, the Hall was renovated and reopened as a permanent exhibition, focusing on the technology and artistry of the ancient Andean and traditional Amazonian cultures, led by curators Craig Morris, Junius Bird, and Robert Carneiro.[219][220][218] The Hall contains roughly 2,300 objects from various ancient South American cultures, including the Moche, Chávin, Chancay, Paracas, Nazca, and Inca.[221][222] A number of the artifacts on display come from the Roosevelt Collections, which were collected by Theodore Roosevelt on expeditions to South America in the early 20th century and donated to the museum.[222]

Margaret Mead Hall of Pacific Peoples

[edit]
A fiberglass cast of a moai in the Margaret Mead Hall of Pacific Peoples

The Hall of Pacific Peoples is on the southwestern corner of the third floor, accessed through the Hall of Plains Indians.[160] The cultural anthropologist Margaret Mead had founded the Hall of Pacific Peoples in 1971.[223] From the time Mead began curatorial work on the hall in 1945, she conceived an exhibit environment that would emulate sights and sounds from the Pacific regions on display.[224] After Mead's death in 1978, the hall reopened in December 1984 as the Margaret Mead Hall of Pacific Peoples.[225][226] The new hall, designed by Eugene Burgmann, maintained the blue-themed ocean and sky ambiance of the original hall.[224] The hall was once again closed in 1997 and reopened in 2001 with an updated design that retained the geocultural "alcoves" first installed with the 1984 remodel.[227]

Balinese wayang puppets collected by Mead and Bateson on display with photograph of puppet maker by Bateson.

The Margaret Mead Hall of Pacific Peoples contains artifacts from New Zealand, Australia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Micronesia, Melanesia and other Pacific islands.[228][229][227] Mead had collected 250 of the 1,500 items in the hall. Some of these were probably selected from the 3,284 items she collected for the American Museum of Natural History during fieldwork in New Guinea and other Pacific island locations, 1928–1939.[230] Others, such as the theatrical set from a puppet play in Bali, were chosen from among the approximately 600 items that Mead and her anthropologist husband Gregory Bateson had sent to the American Museum of Natural History while they were conducting fieldwork in Bali, 1936–1938.[227] The exhibits in the Margaret Mead Hall of Pacific Peoples also include a fiberglass cast of an Easter Island moai statue and capes made of honeycreeper feathers.[229]

Native American halls

[edit]
Northwest Coast Hall
[edit]
Kwakwaka'wakw House Posts

The Northwest Coast Hall is a one-story hall on the museum's ground floor behind the Grand Gallery and in between Warburg and Spitzer Halls.[160] it is the museum's oldest hall, having been established in 1899 by anthropologist Franz Boas as the Jesup North Pacific Hall.[231][232] The hall now contains artifacts and exhibits of the tribes of the North Pacific Coast cultural region (Southern Alaska, Northern Washington, and a portion of British Columbia). Featured prominently in the hall are four "House Posts" from the Kwakwaka'wakw nation and murals by William S. Taylor depicting native life.[233] As of 2022, there are 9,000 items in total, including 78 totem poles,[231] as well as a Haida canoe suspended from the ceiling (relocated from the Grand Gallery in 2020).[234][235] The artifacts are accompanied by text in numerous Native American languages.[232]

Nuxalk Masks

Artifacts in the hall originated from three main sources. The earliest of these was a gift of Haida artifacts collected by John Wesley Powell and donated by future trustee Heber R. Bishop in 1882. This was followed by the museum's purchase of two collections of Tlingit artifacts collected by Lt. George T. Emmons in 1888 and 1894.[236] The remainder of the hall's artifacts were collected during the famed Jesup North Pacific Expedition between 1897 and 1902.[237][238] Led by Boas and financed by museum president Morris Ketchum Jesup, the expedition was the first for the museum's Division of Anthropology and is now considered the "foremost expedition in American anthropology".[238] Many famous ethnologists took part, including George Hunt, who secured the Kwakwaka'wakw House Posts in the hall.[239] Other tribes featured in the hall include Coastal Salish, Nuu-chah-nulth, Tsimshian, and Nuxalk.[240]

At the time of its opening, the Northwest Coast Hall was one of four halls dedicated to the native peoples of United States and Canada. It was originally organized in two sections, the first being a general area pertaining to all peoples of the region and the second a specialized area divided by tribe. This was a point of contention for Boas who wanted all artifacts in the hall to be associated with the proper tribe (much like it is currently organized), eventually leading to the dissolution of Boas's relationship with the museum.[236][241] In May 2022, the hall reopened after a five-year, $19 million renovation, with more than 1,000 artifacts on view. The new display includes work from contemporary artists such as Greg Colfax KlaWayHee and Robert Davidson.[242][243]

Hall of Plains Indians
[edit]

The Hall of Plains Indians is on the south side of the third floor, near the western end of the museum.[160] This hall opened in February 1967.[244][245] The primary focus of this hall is the North American Great Plains peoples as they were at the middle of the 19th century, including depictions of Blackfeet (see also: Blackfoot Confederacy), Hidatsa, and Dakota cultures. Of particular interest is a Folsom point discovered in 1926 New Mexico, providing evidence of early American colonization of the Americas. [246]

Hall of Eastern Woodlands Indians
[edit]

The Hall of Eastern Woodlands Indians is next to the Hall of Plains Indians, on the south side of the third floor.[160] This hall opened in May 1966.[247] It details the lives and technology of traditional Native American peoples in the woodland environments of eastern North America. These include Cree, Mohegan, Ojibwe, and Iroquois cultures. The exhibit features examples of indigenous basketry, pottery, farming techniques, food preparation, metal jewelry, musical instruments, and textiles. Other highlights include a model of a Menominee birchbark canoe and various traditional lodgings such as an Ojibwa domed wigwam, an Iroquois longhouse, a Creek council house, and other eastern woodland dwelling styles.[248] As of January 2024, the Hall of Eastern Woodlands Indians, along with the Hall of the Plains Indians, is closed to ensure compliance with new NAGPRA regulations.[249][127]

Human origins halls

[edit]

Anne and Bernard Spitzer Hall of Human Origins

[edit]
Homo erectus diorama in the Hall of Human Origins

The Anne and Bernard Spitzer Hall of Human Origins, formerly The Hall of Human Biology and Evolution, is on the south side of the first floor, near the western end of the museum.[160] It opened under its current name on February 10, 2007.[250][251] When it first opened in 1921, the hall was known as the "Hall of the Age of Man", the only major exhibition in the United States to present an in-depth investigation of human evolution.[252] The displays traced the story of Homo sapiens, illuminated the path of human evolution and examined the origins of human creativity.[253]

Many of the displays from the original hall can still be viewed in the present expanded format. These include life-size dioramas of human predecessors Australopithecus afarensis, Homo ergaster, Neanderthal, and Cro-Magnon, showing each species demonstrating the behaviors and capabilities that scientists believe they were capable of. Also displayed are full-sized casts of important fossils, including the 3.2-million-year-old Lucy skeleton and the 1.7-million-year-old Turkana Boy, and Homo erectus specimens including a cast of Peking Man.[253] The hall also features replicas of ice age art found in the Dordogne region of southwestern France. The limestone carvings of horses were made nearly 26,000 years ago and are considered to represent some of the earliest artistic expression of humans.[251]

Earth and planetary science halls

[edit]

Arthur Ross Hall of Meteorites

[edit]
Cape York Meteorite
Willamette Meteorite

The Arthur Ross Hall of Meteorites is on the southwest corner of the first floor.[160] It contains some of the finest specimens in the world including Ahnighito, a section of the 200-ton Cape York meteorite which was first made known to non-Inuit cultures on their investigation of Meteorite Island, Greenland. Its great weight, 34 tons, makes it the largest displayed in the Northern Hemisphere.[254] It has support by columns that extend through the floor and into the bedrock below the museum.[255]

The hall also contains extra-solar nanodiamonds (diamonds with dimensions on the nanometer level) more than 5 billion years old. These were extracted from a meteorite sample through chemical means, and they are so small that a quadrillion of these fit into a volume smaller than a cubic centimeter.[256]

Allison and Roberto Mignone Halls of Gems and Minerals

[edit]

The Allison and Roberto Mignone Halls of Gems and Minerals (formerly the Harry Frank Guggenheim Hall of Gems and Minerals) is on the first floor, north of the Ross Hall of Meteorites.[160] It houses thousands of rare gems, minerals specimens and pieces of jewelry. The halls closed in 2017 to undergo a $32 million redesign by Ralph Appelbaum Associates and reopened to the general public in June 2021.[257][258] The redesigned exhibits adopt newer philosophies in exhibit design, including a focus on storytelling, interactivity, and connecting ideas across disciplines. The halls explore a range of topics, including the diversification of mineral species over the course of Earth's history, plate tectonics, and the stories of specific gems.[259]

The halls display rare samples chosen from among the more than 100,000 pieces in the museum's collection including the Star of India, the Patricia Emerald, and the DeLong Star Ruby.[260]

David S. and Ruth L. Gottesman Hall of Planet Earth

[edit]

The David S. and Ruth L. Gottesman Hall of Planet Earth is on the first floor at the northeast corner of the museum.[160] Opened in 1999, it is a permanent hall devoted to the history of Earth, from accretion to the origin of life and contemporary human impacts on the planet. The hall was designed to answer five key questions: "How has earth evolved? Why are there ocean basins, continents and mountains? How do scientists read rocks? What causes climate and climate change? Why is earth habitable?"[261][262] The hall features rocks and other objects collected over 28 expeditions; the oldest rock is 4.3 billion years old, while the youngest was collected from a volcano on the day that it solidified. There is also a 30-seat granite amphitheater, with a globe, at the center of the hall.[262]

Several sections also discuss the studies of Earth systems, including geology, glaciology, atmospheric sciences, and volcanology. The exhibit has several large, touchable rock specimens. The hall features striking samples of banded iron and deformed conglomerate rocks, as well as granites, sandstones, lavas, and three black smokers. The north section of the hall, which deals primarily with plate tectonics, is arranged to mimic the Earth's structure, with the core and mantle at the center and crustal features on the perimeter.[263]

Fossil halls

[edit]
Tyrannosaurus rex in the Hall of Saurischian Dinosaurs
Skeleton of Styracosaurus

Storage facilities

[edit]

Most of the museum's collections of mammalian and dinosaur fossils remain hidden from public view and are kept in many repositories deep within the museum complex.[104] The most significant storage facility among these is the ten-story Childs Frick Building, which started construction in 1969[264] and was completed in 1973.[104][105] When the Frick Building was completed, the museum's collection of fossilized mammals and dinosaurs was the world's largest such collection, weighing 600 short tons (540 long tons; 540 t). The Frick Building's top three floors contain laboratories and offices.[265]

Other areas of the museum contain repositories of life from the past. The Whale Bone Storage Room is a cavernous space in which powerful winches come down from the ceiling to move the giant fossil bones about. The museum attic upstairs includes even more storage facilities, such as the Elephant Room, while the tusk vault and boar vault are downstairs from the attic.[266]

Public displays

[edit]

The great fossil collections that are open to public view occupy the entire fourth floor of the museum.[160] The fourth floor exhibits are accessed by the Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Orientation Center, which opened in 1996.[267] On the 77th Street side of the museum the visitor begins in the Orientation Center and follows a carefully marked path, which takes the visitor along an evolutionary tree of life. As the tree "branches" the visitor is presented with the familial relationships among vertebrates, called cladograms. A video projection on the museum's fourth floor introduces visitors to the concept of the cladogram.[268][267]

Many of the fossils on display represent unique and historic pieces that were collected during the museum's golden era of worldwide expeditions (1880s–1930s).[19] On a smaller scale, expeditions continue into the present and have resulted in additions to the collections from Vietnam, Madagascar, South America, and central and eastern Africa.

Halls

[edit]

The first dinosaur hall in the museum opened in 1905.[90][91] The 4th floor includes the following halls:[269]

  • Hall of Saurischian Dinosaurs (recognized by their grasping hand, long mobile neck, and the downward/forward position of the pubis bone, they are forerunners of the modern bird)[270]
  • Hall of Ornithischian Dinosaurs (defined for a pubic bone that points toward the back)
  • Hall of Vertebrate Origins
  • Hall of Primitive Mammals
  • Hall of Advanced Mammals

The dinosaur halls were temporarily closed for renovation starting in 1990.[271] The first halls to reopen were the primitive-mammal and advanced-mammal halls, part of the Lila Acheson Wallace Wing of Mammals and Their Extinct Relatives, which opened in 1994.[272][273] The Halls of Saurischian Dinosaurs and Ornithischian Dinosaurs reopened in 1995 as part of a $12 million expansion.[274][275] The Hall of Vertebrate Origins opened in 1996.[267]

Fossils on display

[edit]
Edmontosaurus annectens fossil skeletons

The fossils on display include:

  • Tyrannosaurus rex: Composed almost entirely of real fossil bones, it is mounted in a horizontal stalking pose balanced on powerful legs. The specimen is actually composed of fossil bones from two T. rex skeletons discovered in Montana in 1902 and 1908 by famous dinosaur hunter Barnum Brown.[276]
  • Mammuthus: Larger than its relative the woolly mammoth, these fossils are from an animal that lived 11,000 years ago in Indiana.[277]
  • Apatosaurus or Brontosaurus: This giant specimen was discovered at the end of the 19th century. Although most of its fossil bones are original, the skull is not, since none was found on site. The skeleton is composed primarily of the specimen AMNH 460, as well as specimens AMNH 222, AMNH 339, AMNH 592, and casts of the Brontosaurus excelsus holotype YPM 1980.[278][279] It was only many years later that the first Apatosaurus skull was discovered, and so a plaster cast of that skull was made and placed on the museum's mount. A Camarasaurus skull had been used mistakenly until a correct skull was found.[280] It is not entirely certain whether this specimen is a Brontosaurus or an Apatosaurus, and therefore it is considered an "unidentified apatosaurine", as it could also potentially be its own genus and species.[279]
  • Brontops: Extinct mammal distantly related to the horse and rhinoceros. It lived 35 million years ago in what is now South Dakota. It is noted for its magnificent and unusual pair of horns.[281]
  • A skeleton of Edmontosaurus annectens, a large herbivorous ornithopod dinosaur. The specimen is an example of a "mummified" dinosaur fossil in which the soft tissue and skin impressions were imbedded in the surrounding rock. The specimen is mounted as it was found, lying on its side with its legs drawn up and head drawn backwards.[282]
  • On September 26, 2007, an 80-million-year-old, 2 ft (61 cm) diameter fossil of an ammonite, which is composed entirely of the gemstone ammolite, made its debut at the museum. Neil Landman, curator of fossil invertebrates, explained that ammonites (shelled cephalopod mollusks in the subclass Ammonoidea) became extinct 66 million years ago, in the same extinction event that killed the dinosaurs. Korite International donated the fossil after its discovery in Alberta, Canada.[283]
  • One skeleton of an Allosaurus scavenging from a Brontosaurus corpse based on fossils found at Bone Cabin Quarry preserving large bite marks on Apatosaurine vertebrae.[284][285][286]
  • The only known skull of Andrewsarchus mongoliensis.[287]
  • A display of various species of ground sloths including Megalocnus rodens, Scelidotherium cuvieri, Megalonyx wheatleyi and Glossotherium robustus
A display of various species of ground sloths (from left) Megalocnus rodens, Scelidotherium cuvieri, Megalonyx wheatleyi, Glossotherium robustus

A Triceratops and a Stegosaurus are also both on display, among many other specimens.

Besides the fossils in museum display, many specimens are stored in the collections available for scientists. Those include important specimens such as complete diplodocid skull,[288] tyrannosaurid teeth, sauropod vertebrae, and many holotypes.

Rose Center for Earth and Space

[edit]
Rose Center for Earth and Space

The Hayden Planetarium, connected to the museum, is now part of the Rose Center for Earth and Space on the north side of the museum.[160] The original Hayden Planetarium was founded in 1933 with a donation by philanthropist Charles Hayden, and it opened in 1935.[289] The AMNH announced the modern Rose Center for Earth and Space in early 1995,[135] and demolition began the same year.[290]

The Frederick Phineas and Sandra Priest Rose Center for Earth and Space was completed in 2000 at a cost of $210 million.[108][109] Designed by James Stewart Polshek, the new building consists of a six-story high glass cube enclosing an 87 ft (27 m) illuminated sphere that appears to float, although it is actually supported by truss work. Polshek has referred to his work as a "cosmic cathedral".[108] The sphere is known as the Space Theater.[291]

The facility encloses 333,500 sq ft (30,980 m2) of research, education, and exhibition space as well as the Hayden planetarium. Also in the facility is the Department of Astrophysics, the newest academic research department in the museum. Neil DeGrasse Tyson is the director of the Hayden Planetarium. In addition, Polshek designed the 1,800 sq ft (170 m2) Weston Pavilion, a 43 ft (13 m) high transparent structure of "water white" glass along the museum's west facade. This structure, a small companion piece to the Rose Center, offers a new entry way to the museum as well as opening further exhibition space for astronomically related objects.[292] The Heilbrun Cosmic Pathway is one of the most popular exhibits in the Rose Center.[250]

Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation

[edit]

Designed by Studio Gang and landscape architects Reed Hilderbrand, the Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education and Innovation opened in May 2023. The 230,000-square-foot addition includes six floors above ground, and one below. The Gilder Center welcomes visitors with a new, accessible entrance on Columbus Avenue that connects to central five-story atrium and creates more than 30 connections to the existing museum.[293] The atrium's architecture is informed by natural processes like the movement of wind and water that shape geological landscapes.[294] To achieve the continuous visual form, the atrium is constructed with shotcrete. The curvilinear façade contrasts with the earlier High Victorian Gothic, Richardson Romanesque, and Beaux Arts structures, but its Milford Pink granite cladding is the same stone used on the Museum's west side.[295][296]

Richard Gilder Center
Inside the Richard Gilder Center

The Richard Gilder Center houses new exhibition and display areas devoted to insects, including an insectarium and butterfly vivarium, where visitors can walk among hundreds of live specimens as they flutter about in a lush tropical setting. It also includes a visible storage structure that houses and displays scientific specimens; an expanded research library; classrooms and education areas, and laboratories.[297] Another permanent fixture is an immersive and interactive video experience called "Invisible Worlds" that focuses on the vital, often hard-to-see connections that support life, such as the firing of brain neurons, the exchange of nutrients and water between tree roots, and the microscopic world of plankton in ocean ecosystems.[298]

Leafcutter ant colony in the Gilder Center Insectarium

This expansion was originally supposed to be north of the existing museum, occupying parts of Theodore Roosevelt Park. The expansion was relocated to the west side of the existing museum, and its footprint was reduced in size, due to opposition to construction in the park. The annex replaced three existing buildings along Columbus Avenue's east side.[136]

Exhibitions Lab

[edit]

Founded in 1869, the AMNH Exhibitions Lab has since produced thousands of installations. The department is notable for its integration of new scientific research into immersive art and multimedia presentations. In addition to the famous dioramas at its home museum and the Rose Center for Earth and Space, the lab has also produced international exhibitions and software such as the Digital Universe Atlas.[299]

The exhibitions team currently consists of over sixty artists, writers, preparators, designers and programmers. The department is responsible for the creation of two to three exhibits per year. These extensive shows typically travel nationally to sister natural history museums. They have produced, among others, the first exhibits to discuss Darwinian evolution,[252] human-induced climate change[300] and the mesozoic mass extinction via asteroid.

Research Library

[edit]
Reading room of the David S. and Ruth L. Gottesman Research Library and Learning Center

The Research Library is open to staff and public visitors, and is on the fourth floor of the museum.[301] The Library collects materials covering such subjects as mammalogy, earth and planetary science, astronomy and astrophysics, anthropology, entomology, herpetology, ichthyology, paleontology, ethology, ornithology, mineralogy, invertebrates, systematics, ecology, oceanography, conchology, exploration and travel, history of science, museology, bibliography, genomics, and peripheral biological sciences. The collection has many retrospective materials, some going back to the 15th century, that are difficult to find elsewhere.[302]

In its early years, the Library expanded its collection mostly through such gifts as John Clarkson Jay's conchological library,[303][304] Carson Brevoort's library on fishes and general zoology,[304][305] Daniel Giraud Elliot's ornithological library,[304][305] S. Lowell Elliot's collection of books and pamphlets on various subjects,[306] Harry Edwards's entomological library,[305][307] the Hugh Jewett collection of voyages and travel,[55] and Jules Marcou's geology collection.[307][308] In the 1900s, the library continued to grow with donations from figures and organizations such as Egbert Viele, the American Ethnological Society, Joel Asaph Allen, Hermon Carey Bumpus, and Henry Fairfield Osborn.[309]

The new Library was designed by the firm Roche-Dinkeloo in 1992. The space is 55,000 sq ft (5,100 m2) and includes five different "conservation zones", including the 50-person reading room, public offices, and temperature- and humidity-controlled rooms.[310] Today, the Library's collections contain over 550,000 volumes of monographs, serials, pamphlets, reprints, microforms, and original illustrations, as well as film, photographic, archives and manuscripts, fine art, memorabilia and rare book collections.

Special collections include:

  • Institutional Archives, Manuscripts, and Personal Papers: Includes archival documents, field notebooks, clippings and other documents relating to the museum, its scientists and staff, scientific expeditions and research, museum exhibitions, education, and general administration.[311]
  • Art and Memorabilia Collection.[312]
  • Moving Image Collection.[313]
  • Vertical Files: Relating to exhibitions, expeditions, and museum operations.[314]

Activities

[edit]

Research activities

[edit]
A matrix barcode that uniquely identifies a specimen in the museum's entomology collection.

The museum has a scientific staff of more than 225, and sponsors over 120 special field expeditions each year. Many of the fossils on display represent unique and historic pieces that were collected during the museum's golden era of worldwide expeditions (1880s–1930s). Examples of some of these expeditions, financed in whole or part by the AMNH are: Jesup North Pacific Expedition, the Whitney South Seas Expedition, the Roosevelt–Rondon Scientific Expedition, the Crocker Land Expedition, and the expeditions to Madagascar and New Guinea by Richard Archbold. On a smaller scale, expeditions continue into the present. The museum also publishes several peer-reviewed journals, including the Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History.[315]

Southwestern Research Station

[edit]

The AMNH operates a biological field station in Portal, Arizona, among the Chiricahua Mountains. The Southwestern Research Station was established in 1955, purchased with a grant from philanthropist David Rockefeller, and with entomologist Mont Cazier as its first director.[316] The station, in a "biodiversity hotspot", is used by researchers and students, and offers occasional seminars to the public.[317]

Educational outreach

[edit]

AMNH's education programs include outreach to schools in New York City by the Moveable Museum.[318] The AMNH offers a wide variety of educational programs, camps, and classes for students from pre-K to post-graduate levels. The AMNH sponsors the Lang Science Program, a comprehensive 5th–12th grade research and science education program, and the Science Research Mentorship Program (SRMP), in which pairs of students conduct a full year of intensive original research with an AMNH scientist.[319] As of 2023, about 400,000 schoolchildren annually take field trips to the AMNH.[320] Although most students visit for a day or less, since late 2023 the museum has also provided a weeklong educational program called Beyond Elementary Explorations in Science.[320]

Richard Gilder Graduate School

[edit]

On October 23, 2006, the museum launched the Richard Gilder Graduate School, becoming the first American museum in the United States to award doctoral degrees in its own name.[321][322] The school is named for businessman Richard Gilder, who contributed $50 million toward the school.[322][323] Accredited in 2009,[324] the school had 11 students enrolled in 2011, who work closely with curators and have access to the collections.[325] The first seven graduates were awarded their degrees in 2013.[326] The AMNH offers a Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT) in Earth Science[327] and a PhD in Comparative Biology.[328][329]

The MAT Earth Science Residency program was launched in 2012 to address a critical shortage of qualified science teachers in New York state.[330] In 2015, the MAT program officially joined the Richard Gilder Graduate School, with the NYS Board of Regents authorizing the Gilder School to grant the MAT degree.[331]

Notable people

[edit]

Presidents

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The museum's first three presidents were all cofounders.[16][17] John David Wolfe served from 1869 until his death in 1872;[332] he was followed by Robert L. Stuart, who resigned in 1881.[333][334] The third president, Morris K. Jesup, was president for over 25 years, serving until his death in 1908.[335] Upon his death, Jesup bequeathed $1 million to the museum.[336]

The fourth president, Henry Fairfield Osborn, appointed on the death of Jesup, consolidated the museum's expansion and developed it further.[335] Under Osborn, the museum embraced a growing eugenics movement.[337] Osborn's friend, noted eugenicist Madison Grant, a member of the museum's executive committee, was the author of the 1916 book, The Passing of the Great Race. He also was a funder and shaper of the 1921 Second International Congress of Eugenics, held at the museum.[338] Davenport presided also the 1932 Third International Eugenics Congress.[339]

After Osborn resigned in 1933, F. Trubee Davison became the AMNH's fifth president.[340][341] Davison stepped down in 1951, and Alexander M. White was elected as the museum's president.[342] Gardner D. Stout then served as president from 1968 to 1975, when Robert Guestier Goelet was elected in his place.[343] Goelet served until 1987, when he was placed on the board of trustees. He was succeeded by George D. Langdon Jr., the first president in the museum's history to receive a salary; all previous presidents had served without pay.[344]

Ellen V. Futter became the museum's first female president in 1993.[345][346] Futter announced in June 2022 that she planned to step down when the Gilder Center opened in March 2023.[347] Sean M. Decatur was named as Futter's successor in December 2022 and became the first African American president of the museum on April 3, 2023.[3][348]

Other associated names

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Famous names associated with the museum include the dinosaur-hunter of the Gobi Desert, Roy Chapman Andrews (one of the inspirations for Indiana Jones);[349] photographers Yvette Borup Andrews and George Gaylord Simpson; biologists Ernst Mayr and Stephen Jay Gould; pioneer cultural anthropologists Franz Boas and Margaret Mead; explorer and geographer Alexander H. Rice Jr.; and ornithologist Robert Cushman Murphy.

Surroundings

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The museum is at 79th Street and Central Park West. There is a direct entrance into the museum from the New York City Subway's 81st Street–Museum of Natural History station, served by the B and ​C trains.[350]

On a pedestal outside the museum's Columbus Avenue entrance is a stainless steel time capsule, which was created after a design competition that was won by Santiago Calatrava. The capsule was sealed at the beginning of 2000, to mark the beginning of the 3rd millennium. It takes the form of a folded saddle-shaped volume, symmetrical on multiple axes, that explores formal properties of folded spherical frames. Calatrava described it as "a flower". The capsule is to be opened in the year 3000.[351]

The museum is in a 17-acre (69,000 m2) city park known as Theodore Roosevelt Park that extends from Central Park West to Columbus Avenue, and from West 77th to 81st Streets and that contains park benches, gardens and lawns, and also a dog run.[352] On the west side of the park, between 80th and 81st Streets near Columbus Avenue, is the Nobel Monument honoring Nobel Prize winners from the United States.[353][354]

Commentary

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In 2019, Hamid Dabashi, the Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature at Columbia University, wrote an opinion piece in Al Jazeera criticizing a bronze statue of Theodore Roosevelt, depicting him on horseback above a nameless Native American and African American individual. Having visited the museum, Dabashi reflected on the juxtaposition of scientific progress and what he sees as the persistent legacy of racism in the United States. The statue of Theodore Roosevelt is seen by Dabashi as a symbol of racial hierarchy and the ongoing struggle to reconcile the nation's past with its present.[355] The statue would later be removed in 2022, as a consequence of discussions about racism aroused by the 2020 protests surrounding the murder of George Floyd.[356]

A 2020 article by University of New Hampshire historian Julia Rodriguez contrasts the approaches respectively taken by the AMNH and the Musée de l'Homme in Paris, in terms of their human and cultural exhibits. While Rodriguez criticizes the AMNH's exhibits for their failure to acknowledge colonial histories, the Musée de l'Homme has made strides in decolonizing its displays. Rodriguez also posits that notably absent from such museums are exhibits dedicated to Northern European or New England cultures, suggesting a biased focus on "othering" non-Western societies while normalizing Western cultural norms.[357]

In a June 2024 essay published in Indian online paper ThePrint, Stanford University history professor Priya Satia argues that the museum's Hall of Asian Peoples is problematic because it portrays Asian cultures as static and frozen in time.[358] Satia believes various misrepresentations can lead to misunderstandings and perpetuate harmful biases against Asian and Middle Eastern people. In the same essay, Satia also delves into parts of the museum's own history, such as its 1921 hosting of the Second International Eugenics Congress.[358] Her essay was criticized by Samuel Abrams, who serves as a Nonresident Senior Fellow of the American Enterprise Institute, as a researcher at NYU, and as a Professor of Politics at Sarah Lawrence College.[359] Abrams states that "Critiquing an outdated museum is fine, but nothing about Satia’s thread was constructive or helpful."[360]

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The museum is featured in many works of art and popular culture, including:

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See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
![USA-NYC-American_Museum_of_Natural_History.JPG][float-right]
The American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) is a natural history museum located at 200 Central Park West on Manhattan's Upper West Side in New York City. Founded in 1869, it serves as a preeminent institution for scientific research, education, and exhibitions focused on human cultures, the natural world, and the universe through empirical investigation and dissemination of knowledge. The museum maintains over 30 million specimens and artifacts spanning 4.5 billion years of Earth's geological and biological history, supporting approximately 170 scientists, global field expeditions, and advanced studies via its Richard Gilder Graduate School.
Key permanent exhibitions highlight , such as dinosaur fossil halls and the Hall of Human Origins; in halls like African Mammals and North American Forests with habitat dioramas; across continents; and in the Hayden Planetarium within the Rose Center for Earth and Space. These displays, including iconic mounts like the and T. rex skeleton, have educated tens of millions of visitors and advanced public understanding of natural sciences since the museum's early 20th-century expansions under leaders like Henry Osborn. The institution's collections have facilitated breakthroughs in , , and , with ongoing expeditions contributing to inventories and climate records. Amid these accomplishments, AMNH has encountered controversies, including federal mandates under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act leading to the 2024 closure of major Native American artifact halls and scrutiny over 12,000 human remains in its holdings, prompting efforts and policy changes. In 2020, the equestrian statue of was removed following protests framing it as emblematic of and racial hierarchies, despite Roosevelt's conservation legacy; the museum also issued a 2021 statement acknowledging its historical ties to research. Such developments reflect tensions between preserving scientific collections and addressing contemporary ethical concerns, often amplified by regulatory and activist pressures on academic institutions.

History

Founding and Initial Establishment

The American Museum of Natural History was incorporated on April 6, 1869, through an act signed by New York Governor John Thompson Hoffman, following a proposal by naturalist Albert S. Bickmore, a former student of zoologist , who advocated for a dedicated institution to collect and exhibit specimens in . The founding incorporators included prominent figures such as financier William E. Dodge Jr. and lawyer Joseph Choate, reflecting support from New York's business and civic elite for advancing public education in the sciences. The museum's charter emphasized the discovery, interpretation, and dissemination of knowledge about the natural world, human cultures, and related fields, positioning it as a nonprofit entity distinct from government-run institutions. Initially, the museum operated from the building in , where its first public exhibits opened in 1871, featuring modest collections of geological and biological specimens gathered through donations and early expeditions. These displays quickly outgrew the temporary space, prompting plans for a permanent facility in Manhattan Square (later renamed Park), adjacent to on the . The site's selection was influenced by its proximity to the city's growing population and the availability of land granted by the city, underscoring the institution's reliance on private philanthropy supplemented by municipal cooperation for expansion. Construction of the first dedicated building began in 1874, with President laying the cornerstone on June 2 of that year, symbolizing federal endorsement of the project's educational aims. The structure, designed in a Gothic Revival style by architects Frederick Clarke Withers and , opened to the public in December 1877 under the presidency of Morris K. Jesup, with U.S. President attending the dedication ceremony. This initial phase established the museum as a center for research and exhibition, with early collections focused on fossils, minerals, and ethnographic artifacts acquired through fieldwork and purchases, laying the groundwork for its growth into a major scientific repository.

19th-Century Development

Following its incorporation in 1869, the American Museum of Natural History prioritized acquiring foundational collections to support its mission of advancing research and public . Trustees dispatched agents Daniel Giraud Elliot and William T. Blodgett to Europe that year, where they secured significant purchases, including the Verreaux brothers' extensive European specimens, Monsieur Vedray's collection of 250 mounted mammals and rare Siberian birds, and Prince Maximilian zu Wied's vast holdings—comprising approximately 4,000 mounted birds, 600 mounted mammals, and 2,000 fishes and reptiles—for the equivalent of about $200,000 in contemporary value. These acquisitions, derived from Maximilian's expeditions to (1815–1817) and the (1832–1834), formed the core of the museum's early holdings in , , and , emphasizing systematic classification over mere display. Construction of the museum's first permanent structure commenced in 1874 at its Manhattan Square site (now Park), with President laying the cornerstone. Designed by architects and Jacob Wrey Mould in Victorian Gothic style using brick and stone, the five-story building opened to the public on December 22, 1877, under the ceremony presided over by President . Initial exhibits occupied the Gallery, Lower Hall, Main Hall, and Upper Hall, featuring minerals, meteorites, fossils, and early specimens on the upper floors, marking a shift from temporary quarters in Central Park's to dedicated facilities. In the 1880s, under new president Morris K. Jesup (elected 1881), the institution expanded its scope through sponsored expeditions—a "golden age of " that dispatched teams worldwide to gather specimens—and hosted public lectures to disseminate findings. Collections grew steadily, with early displays of mineral specimens and coins reflecting priorities in and by the late 1880s to 1890s. Jesup's leadership emphasized institutional stability and scientific rigor, laying groundwork for departmental specialization in areas like and , though major hall developments awaited the .

20th-Century Expansion and Key Initiatives

During the presidency of (1908–1933), the American Museum of Natural History expanded its physical infrastructure and scientific collections, leveraging Osborn's influence to secure funding for new facilities and paleontological acquisitions that positioned the institution as a global leader in studies. This era saw the construction of additional wings along West, enhancing exhibition space for growing holdings in fossils, minerals, and ethnographic artifacts. Key initiatives included the Central Asiatic Expeditions (1921–1930), directed by , which traversed Mongolia's and yielded groundbreaking paleontological finds, such as the first documented dinosaur eggs and prolificar theropod specimens like . These expeditions, involving over 40 scientists and support staff across multiple treks, amassed thousands of fossils and geological samples, fundamentally advancing understanding of Central Asian prehistory. Complementing field efforts, taxidermist Carl Akeley's work culminated in the Akeley Hall of African Mammals, opened on May 19, 1936, with 28 meticulously recreated habitat dioramas depicting African wildlife in naturalistic settings, employing Akeley's pioneering freeze-drying and molding techniques to achieve lifelike preservation. Astronomical outreach advanced with the Hayden Planetarium's debut on October 3, 1935, featuring a 75-foot dome for simulating celestial projections and becoming only the fourth planetarium in the United States, drawing over a million visitors in its inaugural year. Mid-century developments featured the Hall of North American Mammals in 1942, displaying dioramas of indigenous species like grizzly bears and moose in their ecosystems, alongside the Hall of North American Forests opened in 1957, which illustrated regional biomes through immersive vignettes. These expansions and programs underscored the museum's commitment to integrating research-driven exhibits with public education, amassing over 2 million specimens by mid-century while fostering interdisciplinary initiatives in biodiversity and evolution.

21st-Century Modernization and Challenges

The American Museum of Natural History underwent significant modernization in the 21st century, culminating in the opening of the Center for Science, Education, and Innovation on May 4, 2023. This 230,000-square-foot expansion, designed by architects and costing $465 million, features a canyon-like central atrium, interactive exhibits including a butterfly and insectarium, and facilities for research and education such as laboratories and a family learning zone. The project incorporated elements and aimed to integrate the museum's collections more cohesively while providing immersive, technology-enhanced experiences for visitors. Earlier efforts included plans announced in 2015 for a $325 million to update facilities and exhibits, which evolved into the Gilder Center amid rising costs and expanded scope. These initiatives addressed the need to modernize aging and enhance public engagement with , reflecting a shift toward interactive and multidisciplinary approaches in museums. The museum also faced challenges related to its historical collections and donor associations. In October 2023, AMNH announced plans to remove human remains from public display and overhaul the stewardship of approximately 12,000 such specimens, acquired through practices now deemed ethically problematic under modern standards, including compliance with laws like the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA). This followed scrutiny over exhibits featuring ancestral remains, leading to their closure or alteration; for instance, the Eastern Woodlands and Northwest Coast halls displaying Native American artifacts were shuttered in January 2024 pending consultations. Such actions responded to activist pressures and legal obligations, though critics argue they reflect selective application of ethical concerns influenced by contemporary cultural activism rather than uniform historical reevaluation. Additional controversies included the 2020 removal of the statue from the museum's entrance, requested by AMNH amid protests linking the depiction to colonial-era associations, despite Roosevelt's conservation legacy. In 2018, the institution faced calls from environmental groups to end ties with donor , accused of funding climate skepticism, highlighting tensions between scientific neutrality and political donor scrutiny. External protests, such as those in 2023 warning of human-driven mass extinction, underscored ongoing pressures to align exhibits with urgent environmental narratives. These issues, often amplified by media and advocacy outlets with progressive leanings, challenged the museum to balance preservation of its encyclopedic collections with demands for reinterpretation and .

Physical Layout and Architecture

Original Structure and Campus

The original structure of the American Museum of Natural History was a Gothic Revival building designed by architects and J. Wrey Mould, constructed from 1874 to 1877 on a site in Manhattan Square, now Theodore Roosevelt Park. The cornerstone was laid on June 2, 1874, by President at the 77th Street entrance, marking the museum's transition from temporary quarters to a permanent facility. The building opened to the public on December 22, 1877, featuring natural light-filled galleries suited to the era's lack of electric lighting, with exhibits arranged to maximize daylight exposure. The 1872 master plan by Vaux and Mould envisioned a symmetrical campus layout comprising twelve interconnected pavilions arranged around a central quadrangular court, forming a four-square configuration to accommodate expanding collections in a cohesive, park-integrated design. This plan positioned the museum along the western edge of , bounded by Central Park West to the east, Columbus Avenue to the west, and spanning 77th to 81st Streets, on approximately 17 acres of public land allocated by the in 1869. Only the initial 77th Street-facing pavilion and partial expansions were realized in the original phase, with later buildings adhering loosely to the while filling the site irregularly due to practical needs. The campus's park setting emphasized integration with surrounding green space, reflecting Vaux's landscape principles from design.

Major Additions and Renovations

The American Museum of Natural History has expanded through multiple building projects since its founding, incorporating new wings and modernizing existing structures to support research, exhibitions, and visitor access. Early 20th-century growth included the addition of specialized halls funded by major donors, such as the 1906 completion of the Roosevelt Memorial wing and subsequent constructions like the Akeley Hall of African Mammals in the 1930s, reflecting the museum's emphasis on dioramic displays of . These organic expansions created a campus of over 25 interconnected buildings by mid-century, driven by collection growth and scientific priorities rather than unified architectural plans. A pivotal renovation occurred with the Rose Center for Earth and Space, which opened on February 19, 2000, at a cost of $210 million, effectively replacing the 1935 Hayden Planetarium building while preserving its core function. Designed by Polshek Partnership Architects, the center encloses an 87-foot-diameter spherical Hayden Planetarium within a cubic glass structure, adding exhibits on cosmic scales, earth history, and interactive space simulations across multiple floors. This project integrated advanced digital projection technology, enhancing public engagement with without disrupting adjacent facilities. The most recent major addition, the Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation, opened to the public on May 4, 2023, following groundbreaking in June 2019 and delays from community reviews and construction challenges. Spanning 230,000 square feet over six stories at a cost of $465 million, the center—designed by —features a central atrium with organic, cave-like forms inspired by geological processes, alongside new galleries for exhibits, a butterfly vivarium, visible research storage, laboratories, classrooms, an immersive theater, and an expanded library. Funded primarily by donor , it connects previously disparate museum sections, prioritizing scientific education and collection visibility over ornamental expansion. In 2011, the museum completed a comprehensive restoration of its original 77th Street facade, the Victorian Gothic "castle" structure opened in 1877, addressing decades of weathering and structural wear through stone repair, waterproofing, and aesthetic renewal without altering interior layouts. This project, part of broader infrastructure upgrades, preserved the landmark's historical integrity amid urban pressures. Ongoing discussions as of 2024 highlight needs for fossil hall overhauls, estimated at tens of millions, to update outdated displays and integrate recent paleontological findings, though no construction timeline has been set.

Storage and Research Facilities

The American Museum of Natural History houses over 30 million specimens and artifacts in storage facilities integrated across its campus, with only a fraction available for public exhibition. These collections are maintained in department-specific areas featuring compact shelving and climate-controlled environments to preserve specimens ranging from fossils and minerals to biological tissues. A Collections Risk Management program systematically assesses storage infrastructure, including physical conditions of cabinets and locations, to identify and mitigate risks to collection integrity. The Center for Science, Education, and Innovation, which opened on May 4, 2023, expanded storage capacity with dedicated collections areas and incorporated research spaces, including specialized laboratories for the Department of Ichthyology. This addition addressed longstanding needs for modernized behind-the-scenes infrastructure, integrating storage with active research functions. storage includes the "Big Bone Room," which holds oversized fossils such as a 650-pound from . Key research facilities encompass the Microscopy and Imaging Facility, equipped with scanning electron microscopes, confocal laser scanning microscopes, X-ray microscopes, and computed tomography scanners for high-resolution specimen analysis. The Institute for Comparative Genomics maintains three molecular laboratories totaling 10,000 square feet, supporting and ancient biomolecule studies via the Ambrose Monell Collection. The Conservation Department functions as a centralized treatment and research hub for specimen preservation and analysis. The David S. and Ruth L. Gottesman Research Library and Learning Center serves as the museum's primary repository for scientific literature, containing over 450,000 volumes and supporting interdisciplinary research. Off-campus, the Southwestern Research Station in , provides laboratory, classroom, and lodging facilities for field-based studies in and .

Permanent Exhibitions

Fossil and Earth Science Halls

The Fossil Halls, located on the fourth floor, present the evolution of vertebrates through more than 600 specimens, of which 85% are real fossils drawn from the museum's extensive paleontological collections. Organized according to cladistics—a phylogenetic method emphasizing shared derived characteristics and pioneered by museum scientists—the exhibits trace lineages from early fish-like ancestors to mammals, with visitors guided by a black line on the floor that branches to highlight evolutionary divergences. The Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Orientation Center serves as an entry point, featuring a theater with a video narrated by actress Meryl Streep outlining core principles of vertebrate evolution, and since 2016, it has housed a cast of The Titanosaur, a 122-foot-long sauropod discovered in Patagonia in 2010. Approximately 100 dinosaur specimens are displayed across the halls, representing a fraction of the museum's holdings, which include iconic mounts such as a composite Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton (AMNH 5027) in the Hall of Saurischian Dinosaurs, an Apatosaurus in the same hall, and a nearly complete Triceratops in the Hall of Ornithischian Dinosaurs. The halls are divided into specialized sections: the Hall of Vertebrate Origins covers early tetrapods and the transition to land; the Hall of Saurischian Dinosaurs focuses on theropods and sauropodomorphs, including a dinosaur trackway and a mummified Corythosaurus with preserved skin impressions; the Hall of Ornithischian Dinosaurs exhibits armored and horned forms; while the Halls of Primitive and Advanced Mammals extend the narrative into the Cenozoic, featuring proboscideans and carnivores. These displays, renovated and reopened in stages between 1994 and 1996, prioritize skeletal reconstructions and contextual fossils to illustrate adaptation and extinction patterns driven by environmental pressures, such as the asteroid impact marking the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary. Complementing the fossils, the Earth and Planetary Sciences Halls explore geological and extraterrestrial materials, with the David S. and Ruth L. Gottesman Hall of Planet Earth in the Rose Center presenting Earth's dynamic history through 168 rock specimens and 11 full-scale outcrop models. Structured around five fundamental questions—Earth's evolution, the formation of ocean basins, continents, and mountains; interpreting rock records; drivers of climate and change; and factors enabling habitability—the hall includes a 4.3-billion-year-old zircon crystal from Australia, attesting to early crustal formation, a fossil stromatolite from Mauritania evidencing ancient microbial life, and samples like pure sulfur from Indonesia and gneiss from Central Park. Adjacent spaces, such as the Arthur Ross Hall of Meteorites, display iron and stony meteorites including the 34-ton Ahnighito fragment from Greenland (fallen circa 10,000 years ago), while the Allison and Roberto Mignone Halls of Gems and Minerals showcase cut gems, crystals, and ores illustrating mineral formation processes under varying pressures and temperatures. These exhibits underscore causal mechanisms like plate tectonics and volcanism, supported by empirical evidence from global sampling, rather than interpretive narratives.

Biodiversity and Environmental Exhibits

The Theodore Roosevelt Hall of Biodiversity, opened on May 30, 1998, showcases the evolutionary history and current state of life on through the Spectrum of Life exhibit, featuring over 1,500 specimens and models organized into 28 taxonomic groups ranging from and fungi to large terrestrial and aquatic animals. The hall includes a 100-foot-long installation highlighting the abundance of resulting from 3.5 billion years of , alongside educational elements addressing risks, such as the Dodo Bird display which illustrates human-induced species loss. A key feature is the walk-through diorama of the Dzanga-Sangha Rain Forest in the , depicting dense tropical ecosystems with diverse and to underscore habitat interdependence and conservation needs. The Hall of North American Forests, established in 1958, examines the ecological diversity of continental biomes through habitat s representing regions from northern spruce-fir stands in to arid cactus forests in and coastal redwood groves in . These immersive displays illustrate interactions, succession patterns, and environmental adaptations, such as the Olympic Rain Forest featuring epiphytes and high effects on canopies. The hall emphasizes dynamics, including fire's role in renewal and human influences like , with artifacts like cross-sections demonstrating long-term growth records and proxies. The Felix M. Warburg Hall of New York State Environment, opened in 1951, focuses on regional ecosystems within New York, particularly the Pine Plains area of Dutchess County, through dioramas simulating seasonal forest transitions and exhibits on geological influences on vegetation. Six cases detail how bedrock types—such as shale, limestone, and granite—shape soil chemistry and plant communities, from acidic conifer habitats to alkaline meadows supporting diverse wildflowers and grasses. The hall integrates human elements, portraying agricultural practices alongside native wildlife like deer and birds, to convey landscape evolution and the balance between natural biodiversity and land use since pre-colonial times. Collectively, these exhibits promote understanding of biodiversity hotspots, ecosystem services, and anthropogenic pressures like habitat fragmentation, drawing from the museum's research collections to ground displays in empirical field data rather than modeled projections.

Human Origins and Cultural Anthropology Halls

The Anne and Bernard Spitzer Hall of Human Origins presents evidence from fossils, artifacts, archaeology, and molecular genetics tracing human evolution from ancestors over six million years ago to Homo sapiens approximately 200,000 years ago. The hall, renovated and reopened on February 10, 2007, integrates paleontological specimens—such as casts of Australopithecus afarensis ("Lucy," dated to 3.2 million years ago), Homo erectus ("Turkana Boy"), Peking Man, and Neanderthals—with genetic data to illustrate key adaptations like bipedalism, tool use, brain enlargement, and cultural development. A mural depicting primate evolution and interactive displays on DNA analysis emphasize dual lines of evidence, challenging visitors to evaluate evolutionary timelines independently of narrative assumptions. Adjacent cultural anthropology halls focus on ethnographic artifacts and dioramas representing traditional lifeways of non-European peoples, drawing from the museum's collections of over 250,000 objects acquired since the late . These exhibits, developed primarily between the and 1980s, highlight regional adaptations to environments, social structures, and , though many reflect fieldwork from eras when methods prioritized amid rapid cultural changes. The Hall of African Peoples, opened in 1968 as the "Man in Africa Hall," organizes displays by ecological zones—grasslands, deserts, forests, and river regions—featuring artifacts like Mbuti pygmy tools, Berber tents, and Yoruba carvings to depict subsistence, rituals, and trade patterns. The Northwest Coast Hall, the museum's oldest ethnographic gallery dating to 1899 and curated initially by , reopened in May 2022 after a $19 million renovation incorporating input from Indigenous nations; it includes 78 totem poles, a 63-foot Haida canoe, and sections on , Coast Salish, and Haida histories, emphasizing artistic traditions and oral narratives alongside archaeological context. Other halls cover Pacific cultures in the Margaret Mead Hall of Pacific Peoples, which examines island and Australian societies through navigation tools, masks, and body adornments; Asian Peoples with Japanese samurai armor and Tibetan thangkas; Mexico and Central America featuring Mayan stelae and Aztec codices; and South American Peoples displaying Inca quipus and Amazonian shamanic regalia. North American halls, such as those on the Great Plains and Eastern Woodlands, showcased Plains horse culture and Iroquois longhouses but were closed to the public in January 2024 under revised NAGPRA regulations mandating tribal consent for displaying certain ancestral items, affecting approximately 10,000 square feet of space and prompting reevaluation of repatriation and stewardship practices. These closures reflect federal policy shifts prioritizing cultural affiliation over continuous exhibition, though core collections remain available for research.

Mammal, Bird, and Aquatic Life Displays

The mammal displays at the American Museum of Natural History primarily consist of three dedicated halls featuring habitat dioramas that illustrate species adaptations and ecosystems. The Bernard Family Hall of North American Mammals, which opened in 1942, contains dioramas of 46 species across environments ranging from Arctic to forests, depicting animals such as grizzly bears, , and . These exhibits highlight North American and historical conservation efforts, with specimens collected during early 20th-century expeditions. The Akeley Hall of African Mammals showcases 28 dioramas surrounding a central freestanding group of eight African elephants, representing , , and habitats with species including lions, , and ostriches. Named after taxidermist and explorer , the hall opened in 1936 following expeditions from 1909 to 1926 that gathered specimens to document Africa's wildlife amid concerns over habitat loss. The Hall of Asian Mammals, opened in 1930, features a dozen dioramas of large mammals from , , and , including , leopards, and , centered around a group of four Indian elephants. These displays emphasize adaptations to diverse Asian landscapes, from tropical forests to high-altitude zones, using specimens from Vernay-Faunthorpe expeditions in the . Bird exhibits include the Hall of Birds of the World, which presents 12 dioramas depicting avian species in global environments such as deserts, rainforests, and polar regions, illustrating evolutionary adaptations and ecological roles. The hall draws from the museum's ornithology collection, one of the world's largest with nearly one million specimens, to showcase from wrens to . Aquatic life displays center on the Irma and Paul Milstein Family Hall of Ocean Life, opened in 1933 and renovated in 2001, featuring a 94-foot-long, 21,000-pound model of a suspended from the ceiling alongside dioramas of coral reefs, deep-sea vents, and open habitats. These exhibits explore marine ecosystems, food webs, and conservation challenges, incorporating over 750 specimens and interactive elements to demonstrate the scale and interdependence of oceanic species.

Space and Planetary Science Exhibits

The Rose Center for Earth and Space, opened to the public on February 19, 2000, at a construction cost of $210 million, houses the museum's core exhibits on astronomy and cosmology. This facility features the Hayden Sphere, an 87-foot-diameter structure containing a 430-seat theater that projects 360-degree immersive shows based on observational data from , the , and other sources. Current programming includes "Encounters in the ," which premiered on June 9, 2025, and depicts trajectories of stars, comets, and interstellar objects across the solar system's history and future. The adjacent Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Hall of the Universe, spanning 7,000 square feet, organizes displays into zones addressing planets, stars, galaxies, and cosmic evolution from the onward. Key specimens include the 15.5-ton , a lunar rock sample from Apollo missions, and illustrating astrophysical processes such as stellar formation and galactic dynamics. These exhibits emphasize from telescopes and probes to explain the universe's structure and expansion. Planetary science representations center on the Arthur Ross Hall of Meteorites, which showcases over 130 extraterrestrial samples, including iron-nickel meteorites, , and authenticated rocks from the and Mars collected via missions. Opened in its current form following renovations in the early 2020s, the hall traces solar system origins through ablation features, isotopic analysis, and comparative planetary geology, underscoring meteorites' role as preserved remnants of accretion disks and impacts. Additional elements, such as the Scales of the Universe exhibit within the Rose Center, use logarithmic projections to convey spatial hierarchies from subatomic particles to galactic superclusters, integrating planetary scales with broader cosmic contexts. These displays prioritize verifiable astronomical datasets over speculative narratives, with ongoing updates reflecting advancements like imagery.

Research and Collections

Scientific Research Programs

The American Museum of Natural History maintains active scientific research programs across five primary divisions: , , , Physical Sciences, and . These divisions encompass studies in biological , human origins, extinct life forms, planetary processes, and cosmic phenomena, supported by the museum's collections exceeding 30 million specimens and artifacts amassed through global expeditions. Research emphasizes empirical analysis of specimens, field data collection, and interdisciplinary collaboration, with approximately 170 scientists contributing to advancements in . In the Division of Anthropology, research addresses all facets of —biological, archaeological, socio-cultural, and linguistic—drawing on a collection of over 500,000 objects from regions including the , , , , and Pacific Islands, initiated in 1873. Programs include fellowships, internships, and grants funded by entities such as the and the , facilitating digital imaging of over 250,000 objects for broader access. The division's work prioritizes verifiable material evidence to reconstruct human adaptation and cultural development. The Division of Paleontology focuses on documenting the diversity of extinct organisms and elucidating evolutionary and extinction mechanisms through fossil analysis, including fossil mammals, amphibians, reptiles, and invertebrates. Integrated with the museum's computational sciences efforts, paleontological research employs modeling and genomic techniques to trace phylogenetic patterns, often in partnership with the Institute for Comparative Genomics. Invertebrate Zoology research targets non-vertebrate animals, comprising 95% of animal species, via taxonomic classification, ecological studies, and amber fossil examinations, such as arachnids and . Vertebrate Zoology complements this by investigating fishes, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals, emphasizing surveys and conservation through field-based specimen acquisition. The Division of Physical Sciences examines the origins and evolution of galaxies, stars, and planets, with a particular emphasis on Earth's materials via telescopic observations, theoretical modeling, and analysis of minerals, gems, meteorites, and rocks using advanced instrumentation. Subareas include Earth and Planetary Sciences, which curate drill cores and extraterrestrial samples to model geological processes. Overarching programs include the global field expedition initiative, enabling specimen collection and on-site data gathering, alongside training through the Graduate School's Ph.D. in , which integrates cross-divisional . Additional opportunities encompass Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) in , earth and planetary science, and , as well as postdoctoral fellowships advancing specialized projects. These efforts underscore the museum's commitment to collections-driven discovery, with ongoing enhancing and global collaboration.

Collection Management and Digitization

The American Museum of Natural History houses over 33 million specimens and cultural objects across disciplines including , , , and earth sciences, managed through rigorous to support , preservation, and public access. Collection management adheres to a formal policy updated as of October 11, 2023, which governs acquisition, , loans, , and ethical handling by staff, researchers, and visitors. Practices emphasize preventive conservation, including climate-controlled storage environments to mitigate deterioration from temperature and humidity fluctuations, alongside protocols to address biological threats like and without relying on chemical treatments where possible. Computerized databases track catalog entries—for instance, over 530,000 in alone—enabling inventory audits, risk assessments, and secure access controls. Staff responsibilities include routine monitoring for physical damage, facilitating specimen loans for under strict , and conducting collection surveys to prioritize conservation needs based on condition data. Security measures extend to off-site contractors and fieldwork, with collection management personnel or designated security substituting for oversight during non-standard access. These protocols align with broader standards for institutions, focusing on long-term viability through documented procedures rather than ad hoc interventions. Digitization efforts complement physical management by creating digital surrogates, reducing handling risks, and broadening global research utility. The museum's Digital Collections portal, accessible since at least 2014, provides to digitized texts, images, sound files, moving images, and archival materials from various divisions. A key initiative, the Accessions Archive Digitization Project launched in August 2022, spans three years with funding from the Institute of Museum and Library Services to digitize, transcribe, and index historical records for searchable online availability. Targeted projects include the digitization of the Meliponini (stingless bee) holdings in the invertebrate zoology division, contributing up to 60% of U.S. bee occurrence data to national aggregates for biodiversity studies. Earlier endeavors, such as the 2014 rollout of a free online image database, digitized over 7,000 historical photographs from expeditions like the Jesup North Pacific and Lumholtz Mexican collections, evolving from an initial goal of 1,000 items to support scholarly and public inquiry. These programs prioritize high-resolution imaging and metadata standards to ensure data integrity, though challenges persist in scaling to the full collection volume amid resource constraints.

Specialized Field Stations and Collaborations

The American Museum of Natural History operates the Southwestern Research Station (SWRS), its primary specialized biological field station, located in the of southeastern within the Madrean Archipelago. Established in 1955, the station spans 95 acres at approximately 5,400 feet and supports year-round focused on the region's diverse habitats, including desert, riparian, and alpine ecosystems bridging the Chihuahuan and Sonoran Deserts. It facilitates studies in , , , , , , arachnology, animal behavior, and , providing laboratories, animal enclosures, field sites, and accommodations for visiting scientists, graduate students, educators, and interns. The station also hosts advanced courses, such as those in conservation ecology and wildlife biology for undergraduates and graduates, emphasizing hands-on fieldwork to advance knowledge and conservation. Beyond its own facilities, the AMNH sustains a global field program sponsoring over 120 expeditions annually, enabling researchers to collect specimens and data from remote ecosystems worldwide. These efforts often involve collaborations with international institutions and local partners, such as the Bahamas Ministry of Education and the Andros Conservancy and Trust in biocomplexity projects monitoring coral reef and island ecosystems. The Center for Biodiversity and Conservation coordinates ongoing networks that convene scientists, policymakers, and organizations to generate empirical data on species distributions, genetic diversity, and environmental threats, prioritizing causal factors like habitat fragmentation over unsubstantiated narratives. In anthropology and physical sciences, AMNH staff partner with universities like Columbia University through the Richard Gilder Graduate School for joint fieldwork, including excavations and genomic analyses of ancient remains. Such alliances extend to pathogen research using museum collections, as demonstrated by collaborations employing DNA enrichment on archived tissues to trace zoonotic diseases like Bartonella. These partnerships leverage AMNH's collections for verifiable, data-driven outcomes, though institutional biases in academic reporting warrant scrutiny of interpretive claims.

Education and Public Engagement

Educational Programs and Outreach

The American Museum of Natural History provides diverse educational programs designed to foster through hands-on experiences, research opportunities, and professional development, serving learners from early childhood through adulthood. These initiatives leverage the museum's collections, exhibits, and scientific expertise to promote in fields such as , earth sciences, and . Programs are often free or subsidized, with a focus on accessibility for residents, including partnerships with public schools and community organizations. For children and families, offerings include structured classes and events tailored to ages 2 through 13, such as the Early Adventures program for preschoolers emphasizing sensory exploration of themes, and Adventures in Science series featuring interactive experiments in the and exhibit halls. These programs incorporate storytelling, specimen handling, and family-oriented field trips to encourage early STEM engagement. The OLogy app and , developed in collaboration with museum scientists, provide free, ad-free digital resources on topics like and , trusted by educators for over 20 years and accessible offline via . Teen programs target high school students across New York City's boroughs, offering free hands-on science courses and paid internships through initiatives like the Science Research Mentoring Program, which pairs participants with museum researchers for projects in , , and . These efforts emphasize mentorship, community building, and diversity in STEM, with interns contributing to outreach by supporting public programs and exhibit development. The Museum Education Experience Program (MEEP) further extends this by training interns in education facilitation, including workshops on interactive teaching methods. Educator programs, such as Urban Advantage—launched in 2004 by the museum's Gottesman Center—support approximately 300 public elementary and middle schools, reaching about 100,000 students and 1,000 teachers annually through professional development aligned with , provision of classroom equipment, and subsidized field trips. Partnerships with institutions like the Bronx Zoo and enable cross-institutional resources, culminating in events like the annual Citywide Expo. Online options like Seminars on Science offer graduate-level courses in subjects including climate change and astrobiology, adapting to remote learning during disruptions like the . Outreach extends beyond on-site programs through community initiatives, such as a 2025 membership program for SNAP beneficiaries providing free access to exhibitions and events in collaboration with the City of New York, aimed at underserved families. Departmental scientists from and sciences contribute expertise to public talks, exhibit design, and K-12 curricula, while residency programs like the Teacher Preparation train urban educators using museum resources. These efforts prioritize empirical without ideological overlays, drawing on verifiable collections data to ground instruction in observable evidence.

Graduate Education and Training

The Richard Gilder Graduate School (RGGS) at the American Museum of Natural History administers doctoral-level training programs that integrate museum-based research with academic coursework, emphasizing hands-on access to scientific collections and fieldwork opportunities. Established as the first Ph.D.-granting institution affiliated with a museum in the , RGGS focuses on fostering interdisciplinary expertise in the natural sciences. The Ph.D. Program in Comparative Biology trains students in evolutionary patterns and processes through a curriculum that includes advanced seminars, laboratory work, and dissertation research aligned with the Museum's strengths in systematics, genomics, and biodiversity. Typically completed in four years, the program requires students to conduct original research under the supervision of AMNH curators and affiliated faculty, with applications accepted annually for fall admission. Graduates emerge prepared for careers in academia, conservation, and scientific institutions, having contributed to peer-reviewed publications and museum collections. Complementing the Ph.D. track, the Graduate Student Fellowship Program supports doctoral candidates from partner universities in disciplines such as , , , and , providing stipends, research resources, and mentorship for 1–3 years. This initiative, including the Systematic Training Program and International Graduate Student Fellowships, funds approximately 20–30 fellows annually and prioritizes projects that advance taxonomic and evolutionary studies using AMNH specimens. For education-focused training, the in (MAT) Earth Residency Program offers a fully funded, 15-month fellowship for recent s pursuing certification as secondary teachers, featuring coursework, museum residencies, and supervised classroom placements in public schools. Participants complete 36 credits, including and geoscience content, with over 90% transitioning to full-time roles upon graduation. Online Seminars on courses, co-developed with Museum scientists, provide flexible credit options in topics like , , and , enrolling professionals and students worldwide.

Public Access Initiatives and Inclusivity Efforts

The American Museum of Natural History maintains a pay-what-you-wish policy for general admission exclusively for New York State residents, who must present valid identification at entry; this allows individuals to pay any amount, including zero, for access to core exhibits excluding ticketed special exhibitions such as the Davis Family Butterfly Vivarium. In July 2025, the museum introduced the Discoverer membership program, granting free general admission and additional benefits to New York State residents enrolled in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), aimed at expanding access for low-income visitors. Accessibility features include free rentals on a first-come, first-served basis, wheelchair-accessible entrances at multiple points (e.g., 81st Street and Columbus Avenue), accessible restrooms throughout the facility, and four elevators serving all public floors. The museum's Explorer mobile app provides turn-by-turn directions for stroller- and wheelchair-friendly routes using elevators, bypassing stairs where possible. Specialized programs like the Discovery Squad offer sensory-friendly hours with reduced lighting, sound, and crowds specifically for children with autism spectrum disorder, including hands-on activities adapted for neurodiverse needs. Inclusivity initiatives focus on recruiting underrepresented students into scientific fields, including the Science Research Mentoring Program (SRMP), a paid year-long opportunity for New York City 10th- and 11th-graders from diverse backgrounds, featuring a four-week summer research institute and ongoing mentorship. The museum also operates the Science Alliance High School program to foster an inclusive youth community reflecting New York City's demographics, emphasizing hands-on science learning. Broader efforts, such as the Inclusive Conservation Community Initiative (ICON), seek to promote diversity in conservation by supporting training and networking for professionals from varied backgrounds, though outcomes remain tied to participant self-selection and program evaluation data. These programs prioritize outreach to build representation in STEM, drawing from the museum's recognition of underrepresentation in natural sciences.

Leadership and Notable Figures

Presidents and Directors

The presidency of the American Museum of Natural History, established in , has typically been held by prominent philanthropists, scientists, and administrators who oversaw expansion, research initiatives, and public programming. Early presidents were cofounders focused on building the institution's foundation, while later ones emphasized scientific leadership and institutional growth.
PresidentTermNotable Contributions
John David Wolfe1869–1872Cofounder; initial fundraising and organizational setup for the nascent museum.
Robert L. Stuart1872–1881Continued early development amid financial challenges post-Wolfe's death.
Morris K. Jesup1881–1908Expanded collections and facilities; secured major donations and permanent site in .
1908–1933First scientifically trained president; advanced research, including expeditions, and grew the museum's research staff.
F. Trubee Davison1933–1941, 1946–1951Navigated and II-era constraints; focused on financial stabilization.
A. Osborn (acting)1941–1946Interim leadership during wartime disruptions.
Alexander M. White1951–1968Oversaw modernization and exhibit renovations.
1968–1975Emphasized educational outreach and international collaborations.
Robert G. Goelet1975–1988Directed major building expansions and strengthened endowment.
George D. Langdon Jr.1988–1993Prepared for digital-era transitions and administrative reforms.
Ellen V. Futter1993–2023Longest-serving president; led $1 billion+ capital campaigns, Rose Center construction, and navigated 21st-century funding shifts; first woman in the role.
2023–present; biophysical chemist background; focuses on amid debates and post-pandemic recovery.
Directors have often complemented presidents by managing scientific operations, with notable figures including (director, 1935–1942), who led Central Asian expeditions yielding key fossil discoveries like early dinosaur eggs. The roles have evolved, with modern presidents assuming director-like executive duties.

Key Scientists and Contributors

Albert S. Bickmore, a naturalist who conceived the idea for the museum in 1861 while studying under at Harvard, served as its principal founder and first superintendent, organizing initial collections and advocating for its establishment amid New York's elite philanthropists until its incorporation on April 6, 1869. His efforts secured legislative support and early specimens, laying the groundwork for the institution's focus on research and public education. Henry Fairfield Osborn, a vertebrate paleontologist, joined as curator of the Department of Vertebrate Paleontology in 1891 and rose to president from 1908 to 1933, overseeing expansions that positioned the museum as a global leader in evolutionary studies and fossil research during his 45-year tenure. He named and described key dinosaurs including Tyrannosaurus rex, Velociraptor, and Ornitholestes, while emphasizing dramatic exhibits to engage public understanding of prehistoric life. Barnum Brown, renowned as the museum's premier fossil hunter from 1897 onward, discovered the first documented Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton in Hell Creek, , in 1902, followed by additional specimens that formed the core of the AMNH's world-class collection. His fieldwork across and beyond amassed thousands of vertebrate fossils, establishing the museum's reputation for systematic paleontological collecting. Roy Chapman Andrews directed the museum's Central Asiatic Expeditions from 1922 to 1930, leading teams through Mongolia's to uncover the first known nests, prolific mammal fossils, and species like , which advanced knowledge of ecosystems. These efforts, involving over 1,000 specimens shipped back despite geopolitical risks, exemplified the museum's commitment to expeditionary science. Carl Ethan Akeley, inventor and naturalist hired in 1909, pioneered modern techniques, creating habitat dioramas such as those in the Akeley Hall of African Mammals that integrated , , and specimens to depict ecological realism. His African expeditions from 1909 to 1926 collected over 20,000 specimens, including a central group for the hall named in his honor upon his death in 1926, influencing conservation advocacy through immersive exhibits.

Controversies and Criticisms

Repatriation of Human Remains and Cultural Artifacts

The American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) maintains a collection of human remains and cultural artifacts acquired primarily during the 19th and early 20th centuries, many through expeditions and purchases that included Native American graves and sacred items. Under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) of 1990, the museum has conducted inventories, tribal consultations, and repatriations, transferring more than 1,000 sets of Native American ancestral remains and over 2,000 associated cultural items since the law's implementation. Internationally, since 1993, AMNH has repatriated over 200 sets of human remains to originating nations. In response to revised NAGPRA regulations effective January 2024, which expedite by prioritizing tribal consent over institutional claims of cultural affiliation, AMNH closed its Northwest Coast Hall and Eastern Woodlands Hall on , 2024, as these exhibits contained items potentially subject to return without free, for display. The closures affected dioramas and artifacts representing Indigenous cultures, with the museum stating the move ensures compliance amid ongoing consultations. Earlier, in October 2023, AMNH removed all human remains from public display, including those from Native American, Indigenous, and enslaved individuals, totaling around 12,000 remains in storage. Repatriation progress includes 124 Native American individuals' remains and 90 cultural objects returned in , with four additional repatriations of approximately 40 items completed by mid-year and at least three more pending. The museum's Cultural Resources Office facilitates these processes through documentation and tribal engagement, while prohibiting new acquisitions of human remains and requiring community consent for any non-invasive research. Despite these efforts, AMNH holds remains of nearly 2,200 Native Americans and Indigenous individuals, contributing to broader criticisms of U.S. museums' slow compliance; investigative reports note that over 100,000 Native remains remain unreturned nationwide, with AMNH among institutions facing scrutiny for prolonged inventories and consultations. Critics, including tribal representatives, have highlighted delays post-closure, with some repatriated items reportedly stored without prompt transfer, though Indigenous groups generally endorse the regulatory changes for affirming over ancestral materials. AMNH maintains that balances legal obligations with , but the process has sparked debate over the scientific value of collections versus , with the museum prioritizing consultation to resolve affiliation disputes.

Political Influences on Funding and Governance

The American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) derives the majority of its funding from private sources, including memberships, admissions, endowments, and philanthropic donations, with government contributions comprising a smaller portion primarily from and state allocations for operational support and facilities. Federal grants, such as those from the and , support specific research initiatives but represent less than 3% of overall museum income on average across similar institutions. This funding structure insulates AMNH from direct federal political leverage, though local government dependencies expose it to municipal budget priorities, which in have historically favored progressive cultural policies without documented partisan withholding. Governance at AMNH is overseen by a board of trustees whose official explicitly accommodates "diverse , religious and political views" to foster independent . However, this diversity has faced external political pressures, particularly from scientific communities and groups aligned with prevailing academic consensus on issues like . A prominent example occurred between 2017 and 2020, when trustee , whose family foundation had donated over $4 million to the museum, became a target for removal due to her support for organizations questioning anthropogenic , such as the . Critics, including over 100 AMNH scientists and curators who signed public letters, argued that her affiliations undermined the institution's scientific credibility, framing her views as anti-science despite the board's . Mercer's tenure highlighted tensions between private donor influence and institutional alignment with dominant scientific narratives, amplified by media coverage from outlets like and , which emphasized her political donations to and conservative causes. She resigned from the board in February 2020 amid sustained campaigns, including petitions from climate activists, without evidence of formal museum policy violation. This episode illustrates how governance can be swayed by activist pressures favoring conformity to consensus views, potentially at the expense of the board's stated tolerance for viewpoint diversity, though AMNH leadership maintained operational independence throughout. No comparable pressures from conservative political entities have been documented affecting funding or board composition. Broader political risks to funding emerged post-2024, with warnings of potential federal cuts under Republican administrations targeting arts and institutions perceived as ideologically misaligned, though AMNH's limited federal reliance mitigates direct impact. City and state funding, controlled by Democratic majorities, has remained stable, supporting expansions like the Richard Gilder Center without overt partisan conditions. Overall, while governance policies aim for apolitical balance, episodic controversies reveal asymmetric influences from left-leaning academic and media ecosystems seeking to enforce on politically charged scientific topics. The American Museum of Natural History's proposed expansion into Theodore Roosevelt Park, primarily for the $383 million Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation, sparked legal challenges centered on alleged violations of land use laws and environmental harm. Critics, led by the nonprofit Community United to Protect Theodore Roosevelt Park, argued that the project would encroach on public parkland protected under a 1876 state law restricting such spaces to recreational use, potentially causing irreversible damage including the removal of mature trees and disruption to local ecosystems. The museum maintained that the expansion aligned with historical precedents for institutional growth within the park and would enhance public access to science education without unduly compromising green space. In March 2018, Community United filed suit in New York Supreme Court, contending that the city's approval process under the Uniform Land Use Review Procedure (ULURP) and State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA) inadequately assessed impacts such as shadow effects on park vegetation, construction-related air quality degradation, and loss of approximately 30 trees. A temporary halt on construction was issued in October 2018 pending review, amplifying concerns from Upper West Side residents and figures like Billie Jean King, who rallied against the intrusion into the 17.5-acre park's tranquility. The city's Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS), however, concluded that mitigation measures—including tree replanting and noise barriers—would minimize adverse effects, with no significant long-term ecological detriment projected. New York Supreme Court Justice Nancy Bannon dismissed the core claims in December 2018, ruling that the 1876 law permitted the expansion as consistent with the park's original designation for museum purposes and that the FEIS complied with SEQRA requirements by adequately evaluating alternatives and impacts. An appellate challenge followed, but in April 2019, the Appellate Division upheld the dismissal, affirming the city's authority and the sufficiency of environmental reviews, thereby clearing the project for construction. These rulings highlighted judicial deference to completed environmental assessments over unsubstantiated predictions of "catastrophic" harm, though opponents persisted in public advocacy emphasizing preservation of amid New York City's density pressures.

Cultural and Scientific Impact

Influence on Public Understanding of Science

The American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) has profoundly shaped public understanding of science by providing tangible encounters with through its exhibitions and programs, drawing roughly 5 million visitors annually. These visitors engage with specimens illustrating core scientific principles, such as evolutionary in halls and in the Hayden Planetarium, which utilizes data from agencies like to simulate cosmic scales and dynamics. Such immersive presentations counter abstract textbook learning by demonstrating causal relationships in natural processes, from geological to , thereby cultivating evidence-based reasoning among diverse audiences. Early 20th-century dinosaur mounts in AMNH's fossil halls, including iconic reconstructions of Tyrannosaurus rex and , initially depicted animals in upright postures that reflected contemporaneous anatomical interpretations but later were revised to horizontal stances as biomechanical evidence advanced, mirroring the iterative nature of scientific inquiry. These displays, pioneered under figures like , promoted to the public while highlighting extinction events and phylogenetic transitions, influencing perceptions of prehistoric ecosystems despite occasional inaccuracies in early posing that prioritized spectacle over precision. The Hayden Planetarium, operational since 1935, has further demystified astronomy through projections of galactic structures and recent discoveries, such as solar system trajectories through the , enabling viewers to grasp vast distances and probabilistic models of cosmic history. AMNH's educational outreach amplifies this impact via structured programs, including field trips for school groups that integrate exhibit-based inquiry into curricula and the OLogy app, a free resource co-developed by museum scientists for interactive exploration of topics like genetics and ecology. Teacher professional development initiatives, such as partnerships with the City University of New York, equip educators to convey scientific content using museum artifacts, reaching urban students underserved by traditional labs. Empirical reviews of natural history museums affirm that such visits enhance conceptual grasp of biodiversity and earth sciences, with AMNH exemplifying how object-centered learning sustains long-term interest and critical evaluation of evidence. The 2023 opening of the Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation expands these efforts with interactive spaces designed to address deficiencies in public science literacy amid complex global challenges. The American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) has served as a prominent setting and inspiration in several films, most notably the Night at the Museum franchise. The 2006 film Night at the Museum, directed by Shawn Levy and starring Ben Stiller as a night guard discovering that exhibits animate after dark, is explicitly set at the AMNH in New York City, drawing on its real-life dinosaur skeletons, dioramas, and historical figures like Theodore Roosevelt for key characters and scenes. The production filmed limited exterior and interior shots at the museum but recreated much of the interior on soundstages to accommodate special effects, while the AMNH's actual exhibits, such as the Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton and Central Asiatic Expeditions dioramas, directly inspired the film's magical elements. Sequels including Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (2009) and Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb (2014) expanded the concept but shifted primary settings away from the AMNH, though the original film's portrayal significantly boosted museum attendance by 20 percent in the months following its release, prompting the institution to introduce themed sleepover programs and self-guided tours highlighting featured exhibits. The AMNH has appeared in other cinematic works, often as a backdrop for New York City narratives or scientific motifs. Woody Allen's Manhattan (1979) features scenes inside the museum's halls during character dialogues, emphasizing its cultural prominence in urban life. Ron Howard's Splash (1984) includes interior shots of the museum in a sequence involving marine mammal exhibits, while Men in Black II (2002), directed by Barry Sonnenfeld, uses its spaces for action sequences tied to alien artifacts. Spike Lee's Malcolm X (1992) depicts biographical moments within the museum, underscoring its role in educational and historical storytelling. These appearances, typically leveraging the AMNH's iconic architecture and collections without extensive fictional alteration, have reinforced its image as a quintessential site of wonder and discovery in American cinema. In television, the AMNH contributed to early documentary programming through a collaboration with on (1953–1956), a live-broadcast show hosted by Charles Collingwood that aired 136 episodes exploring topics, often filmed on location or using museum specimens to educate viewers on global expeditions and wildlife. Later appearances include PBS's Treasures of New York episode on the AMNH, hosted by in the early 2000s, which showcased renovations to the Memorial and fossil halls for a broad audience. The museum has also been featured in episodic documentaries, such as segments in Unearthed (Season 2, Episode 2), highlighting artifacts like embryos and comet-sampling within its collections. Beyond film and television, the AMNH has been depicted in video games, notably as a called "The Libertonian" in (2008), where players explore a interior mimicking its exhibits for missions involving historical and scientific lore. Such representations have embedded the AMNH in interactive entertainment, extending its cultural footprint to gaming audiences.

References

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