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Carnegie Museum of Natural History

One of the Four Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh

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Spotlight on Science

The approximately 10,000 specimens and objects on display comprise fewer than 1% of the 22 million in our care. Every single one holds valuable information. Spotlight on Science shines a light on current museum research to uncover more about the past, present, and future of life on Earth. Visit Spotlight on Science to discover what museum curators, collection managers, collections assistants, visiting researchers, and others are investigating right now in Pennsylvania and around the world.

Current Spotlight on Science displays feature research from the Sections of Mammals and Mollusks. Future displays will highlight research from more of the museum’s 12 scientific sections.

Learn About Our Science

A pangolin
Photo by David Brossard, courtesy of Flickr

SPOTLIGHT ON SCIENCE: Mystery of the Mammals

The mammals that lived alongside dinosaurs were housecat-sized or smaller, but after the extinction of most dinosaurs 66 million years ago, placental mammals suddenly grew to the size of modern-day cows! John Wible, Curator of Mammals, and other researchers at the museum and around the world are digging into why. Spotlight on Science: Mystery of the Mammals invites visitors to learn how research teams are using methods like DNA and morphology to understand these mammals’ evolutionary relationships. See real teeth from Paleocene mammals and touch replica teeth to discover how researchers know what these creatures ate. Play a matching game to guess which mammals are most closely related.

Learn More about Mammals
Spotlight on John Wible
A megaloceros giganteus skull and scientific tag
A selection of bones in a specimen drawer
A tagged skull from the section of mammals

SPOTLIGHT ON SCIENCE: Where’d You Find That Shell?

Did you know that shells you collect on the beach can provide valuable information to scientists? In Spotlight on Science: Where’d You Find That Shell? explore research conducted by Assistant Curator of Mollusks Tim Pearce, Collection Assistant Sabrina Spiher Robinson, and other researchers on mollusks of the eastern seaboard. Understand what shells are made of, how they grow, and how to identify common shells and the mollusks that can live inside them. Learn about georeferencing and why it is important to record the locations of shells you find. Listen to a healthy oyster reef and discover why sea mollusks are important for future ocean health.

Learn More about Mollusks

seashells on a beach. 
Photo by Ed Chechine, courtesy of iStock
Spotlight on Tim Pearce
A person holds a whelk shell to show the inside of it
Photo by Matt Tillett, courtesy of Flickr
Two shells that look like kitten paws in the sand
A black shell that looks like a bird's wing in the sand

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