#AMNH #UrbanPlanning #Architecture #Museums #NYCHistory #MuseumArchitecture #CityBeautiful
https://citybeautifulblog.com/the-american-museum-of-natural-history/
Our earth+ whole planetary system are self-sustaining with each one of us—fauna and flora too—are made of stardust. All the signs and wonders demonstrate how only as a community working together with free will that humanity thrives. Imbalance destroys.
We need to use brain and heart together.
💫
PLANETARY SYSTEM IN #AMNH UWS MANHATTAN NYC
If you just want to see the ants at the #AMNH just go around back by 80th st and they are right by the door on the left.
I go back there all the time.
This colony is voracious eating like six mulberry branches a day. They have a whole jungle gym to tire them out.
Walk through the asteroid strike that killed the dinosaurs with American Museum of Natural History’s new ‘Impact’ exhibit – Space
Walk through the asteroid strike that killed the dinosaurs with American Museum of Natural History’s new ‘Impact’ exhibit
By Joanna Thompson published 19 hours ago
“It sounds like science fiction or the stuff of Hollywood movies.”
A 6-minute immersive panoramic video experience in ‘Impact: The End of the Age of Dinosaurs.’ (Image credit: Alvaro Keding and Daniel Kim / © AMNH).NEW YORK — The American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) in New York City has opened a new exhibition that takes a multidisciplinary perspective on the asteroid strike that ended the Cretaceous period and killed all the non-avian dinosaurs. The exhibit — aptly called “Impact” — chronicles what was, in the words of AMNH curator of paleontology Roger Benson, Earth’s “worst day of the last half-billion years.”
One spring day 66 million years ago, a rock from outer space slammed into what is now the Yucatan Peninsula. The meteor was roughly the size of Mount Everest, and it struck with the force of 10 billion atomic bombs. Nearby forests instantly incinerated as atmospheric temperatures briefly soared to 500 degrees Fahrenheit. Many animals, including large dinosaurs, were buried in ash — though some were able to escape by digging underground or diving underwater.
The tremendous impact also flung a mushroom cloud of ash and dust into the atmosphere, eventually shrouding the planet in a cold gloom. Tiny glass beads rained down as far away as Wyoming. At the same time, the impact triggered landslides, earthquakes and tsunamis around the world.
Continue/Read Original Article Here: Walk through the asteroid strike that killed the dinosaurs with American Museum of Natural History’s new ‘Impact’ exhibit | Space
#americanMuseumOfNaturalHistory #amnh #asteroidStrike #exhibits #impactExhibit #impactTheEndOfTheAgeOfDinosaurs #killedTheDinosaurs #newYork #newYorkCity #rogerBenson #space
The last roses of summer
💁🏻♀️ ICYMI: 🦖🏛️ Adam Savage goes behind the scenes at the American #Museum of Natural #History to see how preparators build lifelike #dinosaurs. The team used texture molds from the museum's #elephant collection for the #triceratops and painted the #mosasaur with colors inspired by caiman #lizards.
#paleontology #science #fossils #art #craftsmanship #amnh #animals #biology #engineering #jobs #nature #painting #plesiosaurs #reptiles #sculpture #stem #work #tksst #video
🦖🏛️ Adam Savage goes behind the scenes at the American #Museum of Natural #History to see how preparators build lifelike #dinosaurs. The team used texture molds from the museum's #elephant collection for the #triceratops and painted the #mosasaur with colors inspired by caiman #lizards.
👉 Learn more: https://thekidshouldseethis.com/post/triceratops-mosasaur-amnh-adam-savage-tested-video?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=new_content&utm_content=amnh-dinosaurs
#paleontology #science #fossils #art #craftsmanship #amnh #animals #biology #engineering #jobs #nature #painting #plesiosaurs #reptiles #sculpture #stem #work #tksst #video
#FotoVorschlag
“Um die Ecke” / Around the corner
Digging out a favorite older photo. The Titanosaur fossil (Patagotitan mayorum) at the Museum of Natural History in NYC is 122 feet long and slightly too big for the room — its skull pokes out of the entrance and peers around the corner, looking into the hallway. A dramatic sight to welcome visitors to the museum’s dinosaur galleries. (Panorama shot — tap and zoom in for details.)