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Bear Mountain State Park (Geology Museum) [39] Buffalo Museum of Science: Buffalo [40] Cambridge High School (New York) Cambridge [41] Museum of the Earth: Ithaca [42] New York State Museum: Albany [43] Orange County Community College: Middletown [44] Rochester Museum and Science Center: Rochester [45] Museum Village of Old Smith's Clove Monroe
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More recent was the 1984 designation of the Silurian sea scorpion Eurypterus remipes as the New York state fossil. [17] Research in New York State continues into the present, particularly at the Research Department of the New York State Museum whose collections contain 17,000 studied specimens and 600,000 more to be used in future research.
Hawkin's conceptual drawing of the Paleozoic Museum. The Paleozoic Museum was a proposed museum of natural history in Manhattan near Central Park.Planning and initial construction for the museum proceeded in 1868–1870; English sculptor Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins planned and began creation of the dioramas, and the foundations for an eventual structure were laid at Central Park West and 63rd ...
Devonian Paleontology of New York (1994) Lasting Impressions: A Guide to Understanding Fossils in the Northeastern United States (1999) New York State Natural History Survey 1836-1842 (2000) Geology of Seneca County, New York (2004) A Leviathan of Our Own: the Tragic and Amazing Story of North Atlantic Right Whale #2030 (2004)
American Museum of Natural History: New York: New York: USA: Skeleton, mounted Triceratops: HMNS 2006.1743.00 Lane Houston Museum of Natural Science: Houston: Texas: USA: Skeleton, mounted Triceratops: MOR 3027 Yoshi's Trike Museum of the Rockies: Bozeman: Montana: USA: Skeleton, mounted Triceratops horridus: AMNH 5116 American Museum of ...
The New York Hall of Science, branded as NYSCI, is a science museum at 47-01 111th Street, within Flushing Meadows–Corona Park, in the Corona neighborhood of Queens in New York City, New York. It occupies one of the few remaining structures from the 1964 New York World's Fair , along with two annexes completed in 1996 and 2004.
He was the curator of vertebrate paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City. Through most of his four decades at the museum, he held a professorship in geosciences at Columbia University. [1] From 1975 to 1976 he served as president of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology. [2]