#American museum of Natural history
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Don’t mess with this fish! For Fossil Friday, let’s meet Dunkleosteus terrelli. It lived some 360 million years ago during the Devonian. Scientists think it was one of the first large jawed vertebrates in the ocean and an aggressive predator. The razor-sharp edges of bones in its jaws served as cutters, and as they rubbed against each other, the opposing jaw blades acted like self-sharpening shears. These bones continued to grow as they were worn down by use.
This specimen, on display in the Museum’s Hall of Vertebrate Origins, was found in Ohio. Spot Dunkleosteus and other prehistoric animals at the Museum! Plan your visit.
Photo: Image no. ptc-5861 © AMNH Library
#science#amnh#museum#fossil#nature#natural history#animals#fact of the day#did you know#fish#fossil friday#fossil fish#prehistoric#devonian#museums#american museum of natural history#museum of natural history#natural history museum#paleontology
260 notes
·
View notes
Text
For #Caturday:
Ceramic bottle modeled in the form of a standing feline, decorated with resist-painted motif. Gallinazo style (aka Virú culture), NW Peru, Early Intermediate Period, c. 200 BCE - 600 CE. Spotted at the American Museum of Natural History NYC.
PS: this vessel may depict the Peruvian subspecies of Pampas Cat aka Northern Colocolo (Leopardus colocola garleppi). The Andean Mountain Cat (Leopardus jacobita) is also often suggested, but their range is more southern and higher elevation than where the Virú were? Also note the stripier legs on the Colocolo similar to the ceramic:
#cat#cats in art#feline#ceramics#effigy vessel#pre-conquest#Peruvian att#South American art#Indigenous art#Gallinazo#Virú#American Museum of Natural History#museum visit#Caturday#animals in art#Pampas Cat#Colocolo#Andean Mountain Cat#wild cats#mammalogy#zoology#species ID#ID#infographic#Peruvian art
3K notes
·
View notes
Photo
Say hello to my little friend, Ray de Lucia (foto Alex J. Rota)
188 notes
·
View notes
Text
She makes me weak in the knees 🫠🫠
#Scarlett johansson#Scarlett johansson x reader#2023#american museum of natural history#natasha romanoff#natasha romanoff x reader
280 notes
·
View notes
Text
#scarlett johansson#2023#american museum of natural history#natural history gala#celebrity#celebrities
181 notes
·
View notes
Text
A giant amethyst geode looks like a portal to the universe.
The New Hall of Gems and Minerals at the American Museum of Natural History.
1K notes
·
View notes
Text
Harvey admiring some bears at the American Museum of Natural History in NYC.
#harvey guillén#harvey guillen#wwdits cast#american museum of natural history#grizzly bear#bears#november 2023#wwdits#guillermo de la cruz
103 notes
·
View notes
Photo
17-year cicada
Image © Levon Biss, courtesy of the American Museum of Natural History
334 notes
·
View notes
Text
if you got a pic of this guy in the Natural History Museum in NYC please reblog with an addition.
I know he's on google images i just keep getting other people who got a pic of this guy responding with their own and its funny
Thank you have a good day
49 notes
·
View notes
Text
Hiroshi Sugimoto. Polar Bear, 1976
15 notes
·
View notes
Text
It’s a stupendous Fossil Friday! Let’s celebrate with Stupendemys geographicus, the “stupendous turtle.” This reptile lived during the Late Miocene some 5 million years ago, and it’s one of the largest turtles to have ever existed. Scientists think this giant’s carapace could grow up to 7.9 ft (2.4 m) long and that it could weigh up to 2,524 lbs (1,145 kg). Stupendemys geographicus is a pleurodire, or side-necked turtle, closely related to the living Podocnemis genus. No skull of Stupendemys has ever been found. The sculpted skull used in this exhibit is based on that of another very large pleurodire thought to be related to Stupendemys. See it up close in the Hall of Vertebrate Origins! Plan your visit.
Photo: © AMNH
#science#amnh#museum#fossil#nature#natural history#animals#fact of the day#paleontology#did you know#turtles#tortoise#herpetology#natural history museum#museum of natural history#american museum of natural history#cool animals#miocene#fossil friday
1K notes
·
View notes
Text
For #UnsolicitedDuckPicDay, check out this #duck on display at the American Museum of Natural History:
“Ceramic whistling bottle molded and painted to represent a muscovy duck, a South American domesticate.”
🆔 Muscovy duck (Cairina moschata)
“Sican style, Peru” - Sican aka Lambayeque culture, c. 750-1375 CE
#animals in art#animal holiday#museum visit#birds in art#bird#birds#effigy#ceramics#pottery#duck#Muscovy duck#Indigenous art#Peruvian art#South American art#pre conquest art#AMNH#American Museum of Natural History#Unsolicited Duck Pic Day
57 notes
·
View notes
Text
A curious and very ironic case of immortality for a gorilla that died over a century ago. This mountain gorilla was sadly killed sometime between 1905 and 1909 when the famed taxidermist Carl Ethan Akeley had traveled to Africa to obtain museum specimens. By 1927, the stuffed and mounted creature was featured in a diorama in New York's American Museum of Natural History. It's still on display to this day. During the '60s, this image began turning up as a cheap scare gimmick -- typically depicting the sexual menacing of a human female and battling a square-jawed male opponent -- in movie posters and comic books both stateside, in Europe, and in South America. Cut to some eighty years after becoming a scientific artifact -- and casualty of the Big Game Hunter/Men of Daring era -- and this image is now ubiquitous as various postcards and souvenirs available in any number of Times Square tourist traps. Fittingly, it's now conflated with the legend of another great ape laid low by a cruel human society.
12 notes
·
View notes
Text
Not a lot of time for museum visits in New York, but we managed to squeeze a couple in. Did a quick crash course of American Museum of Natural History - that place is huge! I'd never seen dinosaur bones irl before, and the cut of the giant sequoia was fucking insane. 🦖🗿
#American Museum of Natural History#museums#history#New York#New York City#NYC#USA#traveledit#personal
9 notes
·
View notes
Text
67 notes
·
View notes
Text
#scarlett johansson#2023#american museum of natural history#natural history gala#celebrity#celebrities
60 notes
·
View notes