Brazos Valley Museum of Natural History

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Brazos Valley Museum of Natural History
Brazos valley museum of natural history.jpg
Established 1961
Location Bryan, Texas
Visitors 50,000[1][better source needed]
Director Dr. Deborah Cowman
Website Brazos Valley Museum of Natural History

The Brazos Valley Museum of Natural History is a science, nature and cultural history museum in Bryan, Texas, United States. The museum also maintains memberships in American Alliance of Museums, Natural Science Collections Alliance, and the Society for the Preservation of Natural History Collections.

The Brazos Valley Museum of Natural History maintains collections in the fields of archaeology, botany, conchology, cultural history, geology, mammalogy, ornithology, and paleontology.

The museum sought to display one of the four space shuttle orbiters made available by NASA at the end of the space shuttle program to its new Museum of Science and History[2] [3] Former president George H. W. Bush, whose presidential library is several miles from the museum, has expressed his support.[4] Museum officials were initially very positive on their chances to be selected with the museum executive directory saying ""I definitely think that we are going to get one of the shuttles,"[5] but in the end, the museum was not among those selected to receive an orbiter or simulators. Nearby Texas A&M University was selected to receive a full motion shuttle simulator used by astronauts in training.[6]

The Frithiof Fossil Collection includes a 15-inch Paleozoic trilobite and complete skeletons of an Ice Age cave bear, early wolf, Saber-toothed cat, along with numerous other partial skeletons. Dinosaurs are represented by the skull, vertebrae, femur, arm, an enormous tail of a hadrosaurid dinosaur, teeth and various bones of a Tyrannosaurus rex and Albertosaurus, and parts of a gigantic Camarasaurus, Triceratops, and Maiasaura. The hadrosaurid tail is unique in that it is one of the few fossils with fossilized skin.

The Museum houses the complete skeletons of Psittacosaurus, an early ancestor of Triceratops, and a complete Confuciusornis, a relative of both the raptor-like dinosaurs and modern birds. Rare, virtually complete skeletons of early mammals, fish, and reptiles are also available for viewing.[7]

External links

References

  1. About the museum
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  3. http://www.theeagle.com/local/Shuttle-might-dock-at-campus2010-07-12T22-04-12
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  7. The Dinosaur Fossil Wars | Science & Nature | Smithsonian Magazine

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