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Greater Boston: Science: Blue Hills Trailside Museum: Milton: Norfolk: Greater Boston: Nature center: Operated by the Massachusetts Audubon Society, natural history of the Blue Hills Reservation, live animals, programs Boardman House: Saugus: Essex: North Shore: Historic house: Owned by Historic New England, open two days a year, late 17th ...
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston: Fenway–Kenmore: Art: Contains over 450,000 works of art Museum of Science, Boston: Downtown Boston: Science: Includes over 500 interactive exhibits, 100 animals, planetarium and IMAX theater Museum of the National Center of Afro-American Artists: Roxbury: Art
Arunah Hill Natural Science Center: Cummington: Hampshire: Pioneer Valley: website, 60 acres, 6 miles of trails, focus is astronomy, science and nature education Blue Hills Trailside Museum: Milton: Norfolk: Greater Boston: Operated by the Massachusetts Audubon Society, interpretive center for the 7000-acre Blue Hills Reservation state park
22 Massachusetts. 23 Michigan. 24 Minnesota. 25 Mississippi. 26 Missouri. ... Amarillo College Natural History Museum, Amarillo; Austin Nature & Science Center ...
Delaware Museum of Nature & Science: Wilmington: Delaware: No No Yes Yes Dennos Museum Center: Traverse City: Michigan: No Yes Yes Yes Denver Museum of Nature and Science: Denver: Colorado: Yes Yes Yes Yes DigiBarn Computer Museum: Boulder Creek: California: No No No No Dino Don, Inc. [6] Media: Pennsylvania: No No Yes No Discovery Center [6 ...
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The museum was opened on January 15, 1939. The museum won "Best of Austin" awards from the Austin Chronicle in 2002, 2005, and 2012. [2] The museum had exhibits on Texas history, anthropology, geography, and ethnography, but these were relocated to other museums (including the Bullock Texas State History Museum) in 2001.
The Boston Museum of Natural History of 1830/1864–1945 should not be confused with the private Warren Museum of Natural History (1858–1906, formerly on Chestnut Street in Boston). The contents of the latter collection, including the first intact mastodon , were relocated to the American Museum of Natural History of New York City in 1906.