Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Fernbank Science Center opened in December 1967, and is an educational facility and an integral part of the DeKalb County School District. It provides programs for the science education of local students, pre-K-12. Both its planetarium and observatory are open for public shows on specific occasions. [1]
Dr. Ralph L. Buice, Jr. Observatory is an astronomical observatory owned and operated by the Fernbank Science Center. It is located between Decatur and Atlanta, Georgia (USA). The observatory owns a 0.9144 m (36.00 in) Cassegrain telescope housed beneath a 10 m (33 ft) dome.
The Works: Ohio Center for History, Art and Technology [5] [6] Newark: Ohio: No Yes Yes Yes Thinkery: Austin: Texas: No No Yes Yes Trolley Museum of New York: Kingston: New York: No No No No Tulsa Air and Space Museum & Planetarium: Tulsa: Oklahoma: No Yes No No Turtle Bay Exploration Park: Redding: California: No No Yes Yes U.S. Space & Rocket ...
Warner and Swasey Observatory: 1919 Cleveland, Ohio, US Warren Rupp Observatory: 1985 Mansfield, Ohio, US University of Warsaw Observatory: 1825 Warsaw, Poland Washburn Observatory: 1881 Madison, Wisconsin, US Wast Hills Observatory: 1982 Birmingham, England, UK Weaver Student Observatory: 1998 Monterey, California, US Weitkamp Observatory: 1955
Jim Cherry Memorial Planetarium at the Fernbank Science Center, ... Arne Slettebak Planetarium at The Ohio State ... Noble Planetarium, Museum of Science ...
Fernbank, Alabama; Fernbank was the estate of Col. Z. D. Harrison in DeKalb County, Georgia. Following his death in 1938, it was preserved and devoted to educational purposes. It lends its name to the following: Fernbank Forest; Fernbank Museum of Natural History; Fernbank Observatory; Fernbank Science Center
Fernbank Museum has a number of permanent exhibitions and regularly hosts temporary exhibitions in its expansive facility, designed by Graham Gund Architects. Giants of the Mesozoic, on display in the atrium of Fernbank Museum, features a 123-foot (37 m) long Argentinosaurus, the largest dinosaur ever classified; as well as a Giganotosaurus.
This list of museums in Ohio is a list of museums, defined for this context as institutions (including nonprofit organizations, government entities, and private businesses) that collect and care for objects of cultural, artistic, scientific, or historical interest and make their collections or related exhibits available for public viewing.