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The Robeson Planetarium and Science Center is located in Lumberton, North Carolina. It is operated by the Public Schools of Robeson County for instruction in astronomy, geology, physics and other science topics. It is a member of the NASA Museum Alliance, International Planetarium Society, SouthEastern Planetarium Association, and Carolina ...
Calusa Nature Center and Planetarium; Cernan Earth and Space Center; Chabot Space and Science Center; Roger B. Chaffee Planetarium; Charles Hayden Planetarium; The Children's Museum, Connecticut; Cincinnati Observatory; Clark Planetarium; Cleveland Museum of Natural History; Cosmosphere; Cox Science Center and Aquarium; Cranbrook Educational ...
Millholand Planetarium at Catawba Science Center, Catawba; Morehead Planetarium and Science Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill – the first planetarium built on a U.S. college campus; Neuseway Nature Center and Planetarium, Kinston; Robeson County Planetarium Science and Technology, Lumberton (limited public ...
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Modernizations to the planetarium include specialized lighting and sound, a new HVAC system, a ticket room, a catwalk above the dome and storage. Roddenberry Planetarium officially inaugurated ...
Roberson Memorial, Inc. was established by the will of Alonzo Roberson in 1934. Following the death of his widow Margaret, the Roberson Memorial Center opened to the public in 1954 for use as a community educational center. The centerpiece of the museum is the 1906 Roberson Mansion, which was designed by local architect C. Edward Vosbury.
The Pink Palace Museum and Planetarium in Memphis. Coon Creek Science Center, the site of Upper Cretaceous fossil finds and a museum in Adamsville, Tennessee [2] Lichterman Nature Center, an arboretum/nature center/wildlife museum in Memphis [3] Mallory-Neely House, a historic home in the Victorian Village of Memphis [4]
The Buhl Planetarium and Institute of Popular Science closed as a general public venue on August 31, 1991, but continued to hold science classes, camps and teacher workshops in the building as an annex of its successor, Kamin Science Center, which opened in 1991. In 1994, the Annex closed and all programming moved to the CSC, while the Carnegie ...