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Travel Tip: Pop Culture and Cinema in United States
Extreme Mammals: The Biggest, Smallest, and Most Amazing Mammals of All Time



The babirusa’s upper canines don’t grow downward as normal ones would. Instead, they grow directly up, through the top of the skull bones and out through the skin on the snout. Babirusas use them for display and in fights against mating-season rivalsPhoto: Wildlife/Peter Arnold, Inc. Photo courtesy of American Museum of Natural History
The babirusa’s upper canines don’t grow downward as normal ones would. Instead, they grow directly up, through the top of the skull bones and out through the skin on the snout. Babirusas use them for display and in fights against mating-season rivals
Photo: Wildlife/Peter Arnold, Inc.
Photo courtesy of American Museum of Natural History
Extreme Mammals: The Biggest, Smallest, and Most Amazing Mammals of All Time
UNITED STATES
NEW YORK  •  American Museum of Natural History  •  Ongoing
 

Featuring fossils and other specimens from the Museum's collections, vivid reconstructions, and live animals, the exhibition examines the ancestry and evolution of numerous species, ranging from huge to tiny, from speedy to sloth-like, and displays animals with oversized claws, fangs, snouts, and horns.

Through the use of dynamic media displays, animated computer interactives, hands-on activities, touchable fossils, casts, taxidermy specimens, and a colony of live sugar gliders —extreme marsupials from Australia — the exhibition will highlight distinctive mammalian qualities and illuminate the shared ancestry that unites these diverse creatures.

The exhibition is divided into nine sections—Introduction, What is a Mammal?, What is Extreme?, Head to Tail, Reproduction, Mammals in Motion, Extreme Climates, Extreme Isolation, and Extreme Extinction—and offers extensive detail on the evolutionary history and family tree of mammals.



American Museum of Natural History Website


Contact: American Museum of Natural History
Central Park West at 79th Street
New York, NY 10024-5192 USA
Tel: (1) 212 769 51 00

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