dinosaur exhibit virtual tour

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Dinosaur hall.

Step Into Our Award-winning Exhibition, and Enter the Age of Dinosaurs

Visitors viewing an installation of a pregnant plesiosaur in the Dinosaur Hall

General Info

Dinosaurs were a specialized group of land reptiles that lived during the Mesozoic Era, between 252 million and 66 million years ago. In the Jane G. Pisano Dinosaur Hall, you can dig into the enduring mysteries of these iconic animals and their ancient world with more than 300 fossils and 20 mounted skeletons on display. Discover how our understanding of these creatures continues to evolve—thanks to the research happening at the Museum every day.

It Starts With a Triceratops

Dino Hall Triceratops skull

A stunning, three-horned behemoth welcomes guests to the Hall–and things just get bigger from there. From long-necked titans to the smallest dinosaur in North America, meet the Mesozoic.

We Call Her Polly

Visitors to the Natural History Museum can see the pregnant plesiosaur on display in the Dinosaur Hall. The specimen is 15.5 feet wide and 8 feet tall. It is the only pregnant plesiosaur fossil ever discovered.

Incredible animals of all kinds evolved alongside dinosaurs. See the fossilized remains of gargantuan reptiles that stalked the prehistoric oceans, along with surprising facts on how they lived their lives.

Our T. rex Trio

Dino Hall-T. rex Trio

The only display of its kind in the world, our T. rex growth series captures a baby, juvenile and sub-adult alongside other prehistoric predators.

Mosasaur Stare Down

Dino Hall Mosasaur mezzanine

Step up to the Mezzanine Level and get a sauropod-eye-view of the giant and not-so-giant animals that prowled, swam and flew through the Mesozoic. Sea reptiles, like mosasaurs, also lived at this time, but are not considered dinosaurs since they did not walk on land!  

Explore the Dino Hall With All-New Trading Cards!

Dino Hall Trading Cards

Collect them all! Celebrate our iconic Dino Hall with collectible trading cards spotlighting T. rex, Velociraptor, Carnotaurus , and “All-Star” Augustynolophus ! Featuring colorful paleoart and fun facts, get ready to rediscover your favorite dinosaurs in a brand-new way. Free while supplies last in the Dino Store. Get the first set of four before they’re gone! Become a Member and collect all twelve at once at any NHM Membership check-in counter!

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Meet Me on the Mezzanine

Even More Dinosaurs

Image of Dino Lab

Dinosaur Lab

dueling dinos

Dueling Dinos

Dinosaur Encounters Show Triceratops Puppet

Dinosaur Encounters

Hunter the T. rex Plushie

Bring home your very own dinosaur and so much more!!

Be a Dino Pro. Take a Virtual Tour!

A guided journey in several languages

Photograph of the Dino Hall exhibit

Virtual Na Paglilibot Sa Bulwagang Dino – Filipino

pregnant plesiosaur in dinosaur hall

Virtual Tour of Dino Hall - Mandarin Chinese

Image of fossils in Dino Hall exhibit.

Eastern and Western Armenian

Image of The Dinosaur Hall.

Virtual Tour of Dino Hall - ASL

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  • Sue the T-Rex

SUE stands proudly in their suite located in the Field Museum’s Evolving Planet exhibition. An animated forest is visible in the background.

Griffin Halls of Evolving Planet & SUE the T. rex

Exhibition summary.

Included with Basic admission

4.5 billion years. 27,000 square feet of evolutionary exploration.

In the Griffin Halls of Evolving Planet , get to know the many creatures that have roamed the earth throughout history, from single-celled organisms to our extended human family. Experience a variety of fossils, animated videos, and interactive displays that tell the story of evolution, the process that connects all living things on Earth.

Don’t miss the Elizabeth Morse Genius Hall of Dinosaurs to get up close and personal with more than a dozen of the biggest creatures in our history. Then, experience the world of SUE the T. rex , our famous fossil with a big personality.

Fossil skeleton

See SUE's fossil skull alongside a mural that recreates what SUE's world might've looked like 67 million years ago.

Martin Baumgaertner

Smell SUE’s carnivorous breath—as well as other more pleasant Cretaceous scents.

Smell SUE’s carnivorous breath—as well as other more pleasant Cretaceous scents.

Step into SUE's world.

Enter a Late Cretaceous forest and come face-to-face with one of the world’s most notorious predators. Alongside SUE’s skeleton, find fossils of creatures that lived at the same time, including Triceratops , small mammals, and fish. See T. rex in motion through a media experience that recreates South Dakota 67 million years ago. Then, use sensing stations to experience how this dinosaur sounded, how its skin felt, and even how its breath smelled.

Already the largest and most complete T. rex specimen, SUE received scientific updates in 2018. We now have a more accurate picture of how a T. rex skeleton should look, including where SUE’s gastralia fit in. Resembling a second set of ribs in the belly, gastralia may have helped T. rex breathe.

Learn more about how we study SUE

Sue Comic

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Sharing #suesworld.

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Some traditions are sacred! 2014, 2019, 2019, 2021 #thefieldmuseum #SueTRex

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Field Museum photo fun dump! Neil finally got to meet Sue and we both got to meet Maximo! Great start to bday staycation 🥰 #chicago #FieldMuseum #Sue #T-Rex #Maximo #Titanosaurus

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Fun at fieldmuseum 😊

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It's hard to tell from the size of this picture, but this is Sue, one of the largest, best preserved fossil remains of a T-Rex ever found (found 90% intact). Sue is 40 feet long, and 30 feet tall at the hip😵. Sue was named after the paleontologist who discovered the remains - Susan Hendrickson on August 12, 1990. Sue was alive approximately 67 million years ago, in what is now the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation, in present day South Dakota. This fossil was auctioned off in October 1997 for a whopping $8.3 million USD. Sue is now a permanent feature at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago, where I got to see her😁 #suethedinosaur #suethetrex #tyrannosauraus #trex #fieldmuseum #fieldmuseumchicago #fieldmuseumofnaturalhistory #enjoyillinois #museumcampus

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Journey through time.

Earth’s evolution is about so much more than the extinction of the dinosaurs and our primate ancestors learning to walk upright. Imagine our planet in its earliest days: volcanic eruptions, crashing meteorites, and the first life forms taking shape. Begin your journey through time and explore each period of our evolution, including the Precambrian era that makes up 90 percent of the planet’s 4.5-billion-year timeline.

As the evolutionary timeline inches toward the present, you’ll examine the most recent ice age (we’re still living in it) and check out some of the most well-preserved fossils of this period. You’ll also learn why so many of today’s species are facing a mass extinction and the role you can play in their survival.

Discover how mammals have evolved, and get a look at early horses, rhinoceroses, and more.

Discover how mammals have evolved, and get a look at early horses, rhinoceroses, and more.

Evolving Planet features four lifelike models of early humans by sculptor Élisabeth Daynès, including this one of the hominid known as “Lucy.”

Evolving Planet features four lifelike models of early humans by sculptor Élisabeth Daynès, including this one of the hominid known as “Lucy.”

Acknowledgments

The Griffin Halls of Evolving Planet are part of the Griffin Dinosaur Experience, made possible by the generous support of Kenneth C. Griffin.

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Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History Virtual Tour

Beyond Dinosaurs: The Secrets of Earth's Past

Stories about the ancient creatures that once roamed the Earth.

AT THE SMITHSONIAN

Amid all the fossils, smithsonian’s new dinosaur exhibition tells the complex story of life.

The much-anticipated exhibition is packed full of Mesozoic dinosaur drama, new science, hands-on discoveries and state-of-the-art museum artistry

Riley Black

Riley Black

Science Correspondent

NMNH-2019-00508.jpg

Time runs through everything. It is not simply a matter of setting an alarm to wake up for work, agreeing on when to meet a friend, or how many years we’ve spent on the planet. Time is what connects our present moment to every other that has come before, allowing us to delve into the past to assemble some understanding of how our current moment came to be—and what might yet happen.

Paleontology, the study of ancient life, is one of the intellectual time machines that humanity uses to investigate and understand nature’s big picture. The National Museum of Natural History has embraced the science since the museum's inception, from the days when “Hatcher” the Triceratops graced the museum’s early “Hall of Extinct Monsters” until the beginning of the 21st century, when the museum decided to close its much-loved dinosaur hall for a lengthy renovation and refresh of the science.

Towering dinosaurs, early amphibians, ancient elephants, and more all gave testament to the strange times and places they once inhabited in Earth history. But now, after years being reconsidered and reshuffled, those familiar prehistoric fossils come back to us to tell a different story. They’ve come to tell us of our connection to “Deep Time.”

Fossils are often treated as tattered remnants of lost worlds, of times vastly different from our own inhabited by bizarre beings with little connection to our modern Earth. But in planning and designing what the new Smithsonian exhibition “Hall of Fossils—Deep Time” should look like, the museum’s paleontologists and exhibit specialists had something different in mind. Each fossil represents a story that joins a grander narrative of life's epic history—from the rise of the first organisms through the parade of majestic prehistoric creatures and beyond, to the future.

“The question we asked ourselves when we started this, is ‘What things about paleontology are different now than the last time the hall was renovated?’” says Smithsonian paleobotanist Scott Wing . The science had undergone an incredible growth spurt over the past several decades, moving far beyond the stereotype of simply collecting and cataloging old bones to a field that considers Earth systems, ecology, and the connections between life of different ages. “It’s not only changed how we study things,” Wing says, “but why we study them.”

dinosaur exhibit virtual tour

Any fossil—no matter how mundane or spectacular—is part of multiple stories of life’s evolution and how organisms responded to their constantly-changing environments. “We now study the fossil record because it helps us understand the processes by which the Earth and life changed through time,” Wing says, “and being geologic-scale changers of the environment ourselves, we need to know how those things work and how we’re changing them now.”

The question was how to tell that story while working in the existing exhibition space. “The biggest challenge is how do you tell 3.7 billion years of life’s story in one space—but also make it meaningful and relevant to a visitor in 2019?” says museum exhibits specialist Siobhan Starrs.

The first step was starting with the flow of the tale. The traditional story of life on Earth often starts with the beginning, around 3.7 billion years ago, from there winding up through time to show the evolutionary connections and transformations that altered the shape of nature. “Deep Time” deconstructs that narrative, starting with the present and moving backward, following connections from our own time deeper and deeper into the past.

fossil palm leaf

Smithsonian Dinosaurs and Other Amazing Creatures from Deep Time

Smithsonian Dinosaurs and Other Amazing Creatures from Deep Time presents some of Earth's strangest and most unusual creatures from as early as 3.8 billion years ago. Beginning with the first evidence of life, it moves through periods of biodiversity and mass extinction and into a look at the first dinosaurs, mammals, pterosaurs, and other fauna and flora from the Archean to the Quarternary eras.

The journey starts even before visitors set foot into the new hall. Henry , the museum’s storied bull elephant in the rotunda, is an iconic, imperiled species in our own time. But as soon as visitors step into the new hall, they’re welcomed by a trumpeting American mastodon—a connection to the Ice Age world of not so very long ago, which began a paltry 2.6 million to 11,700 years ago. Picking up the timeline from there, the exhibition journeys back through the 40 million-year-old hothouse world of the Eocene, the heyday of giant Jurassic dinosaurs 150 million years ago, and the catastrophe at the end of the Permian, 252 million years ago, that wiped out about 75 percent of life on Earth—and beyond.

Naturally, some of the museum’s huge, charismatic megafauna determined the flow of the story. Tyrannosaurus , Camarasaurus , Diplodocus and many more dinosaurian friends all still inhabit the hall, but their sheer size ( Diplodocus measures 90-feet long) required a great deal of space, especially because the museum decided to mount them dramatically, in ways that have never been done before.

Meet the Dinos of Deep Time

As intricate and structurally beautiful as most museum dinosaur mounts might be, many are typically staged in relatively static poses or in displays that reinforce the old stereotype that dinosaurs were snarling monsters of distant epochs. In the Smithsonian's new hall, while there is certainly Mesozoic drama—like T. rex readying to tear the head off Triceratops —a little time spent among the titans in their new displays will reveal other facets of their day-to-day lives that help place them in the broader context of life’s ever-changing story.

Woolly mammoth

“Life is messy,” Starrs says, and the exhibit designers thought hard about how dinosaurs left a footprint on their environments—both literally and figuratively. A Torosaurus, similar to Triceratops , wanders through a Cretaceous forest in a new mural, breaking twigs as it goes. A dome-headed dinosaur called Stegoceras scratches its nose. A brooding Allosaurus curls its tail around its nest. A hungry Camarasaurus rears up to munch on Jurassic branches. “On a personal level, this was closest to my heart,” says Smithsonian dinosaur curator Matthew Carrano , “trying to make these animals seem like they were once real animals and doing something real animals do.”

An intense amount of work was required to come up with these new displays, and the behind-the-scenes efforts have already started to fuel new scientific research. Some of the dinosaurs from the old fossil hall were still partly encased in the rock from their original excavation in the late 1800s. The old exhibits not only had to be dismantled, but some of the dinosaurs had to be prepared anew, revealing information that was previously hidden. The museum’s extraordinary skeleton of the Jurassic meat-eating dinosaur Ceratosaurus , for example, included hand bones that had never been fully described before and were recently studied by Carrano.

Irish Elk

Starrs notes that research into how visitors interact with exhibits and social science was part of the planning as well, in an effort to make the exhibits as interesting and accessible to as many people as possible.

And, following the powerful thread of climate change through time, Wing notes that a specialized conference was carried out over the course of several days to come up with the clearest look at climate shifts through time. The meeting is leading to new approaches in tracking how our world has changed.

“Deep Time” is the culmination of hundreds of years of work by innumerable scientists and community members, from the Smithsonian’s own experts and curators to the 19th-century fossil hunters who dug some of these specimens out of the ground. And what comes together is an integrated view of life where distinct stories become bundled together into the flow of time’s grand narrative. “Visitors will pick up on the fact that things are changing through time, ecosystems are changing as well as animals, and it’s an interconnected system from the beginning of life to the future,” says Smithsonian vertebrate paleontology curator Anna Kay Behrensmeyer .

Amid All the Fossils, Smithsonian's New Dinosaur Exhibition Tells the Complex Story of Life

But what will that future look like? “Deep Time” doesn’t simply stop with the Ice Age, or consider humans outside of the rest of nature. To the contrary, the exhibition drives home the point that the choices we make—from the broader cultural use of fossil fuels to power our lives to the development or conservation of landscapes—have dramatic and increasingly dire impacts on our world. This is where “Deep Time’s” message truly hits home, because it’s only by looking to the past that we can plan for the future.

About 50 million years ago, for example, the Earth went through a natural temperature spike comparable to what humans are creating today with the use of fossil fuels. The complex story of how animal and plant life responded is a preview of what might transpire if we continue on our present course. The importance of the ecological turning point we now stand at is on full display, not only showing visitors how we’re shaping our legacy but also asking them what is worth protecting and how people just like them are starting to make changes.

“We still have a choice,” Behrensmeyer says. What we do next will leave its mark on the planet just as surely as the life of any dinosaurs. Everyone receives a legacy from previous generations and gives one to the next. “What’s your legacy going to be?” Wing asks.

dinosaur exhibit virtual tour

Connection runs through “Deep Time.” There are the connections between prehistoric organisms—whether it’s photosynthesizing bacteria, part of a prehistoric reef, a dinosaur, an ancient mammal or a tree that made up part of an Eocene forest—but there is also our own connection to the past. Everything on display in the exhibition, every fossil, has some relevance to the world we live in today. “I’m hoping visitors walk in expecting a dinosaur hall and they walk away with something much bigger than that,” Starrs says, with the concept that “this story has meaning and relevance to me—to all of us—right now.”

Humans are not the endpoint or goal of this story. Life will go on with or without us, Behrensmeyer notes. But we are not isolated from the evolutionary and environmental phenomena that have so dramatically shaped all these forms of life over millions and millions of years. What’s unprecedented is that our species can make choices about what’s to come.

“We should try to keep ecosystems as strong as possible so that we can find a future that has a lot of elements that we like about the present,” Behrensmeyer says. There’s something wondrous about that. Not only are we uncovering these stories in paleontology’s vibrant Renaissance era, but we are inextricably intertwined with the past lives we wish to understand.

Or, as Carrano succinctly puts it, “We’re part of this story just like everything else.”

Listen to the premiere episode of season 4 of Sidedoor, a podcast from the Smithsonian, which details how scientists O.C. Marsh and Edward Cope went from good friends who named species after each other to the bitterest of enemies who eventually ruined each other's lives and careers.

Get the latest on what's happening At the Smithsonian in your inbox.

A Note to our Readers Smithsonian magazine participates in affiliate link advertising programs. If you purchase an item through these links, we receive a commission.

Riley Black

Riley Black | | READ MORE

Riley Black is a freelance science writer specializing in evolution, paleontology and natural history who blogs regularly for Scientific American .

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Carnegie Museum of Natural History

One of the Four Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh

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Dinosaurs in Their Time

Stepping Back in Time

Stepping Back in Time

Jurassic Days: Icarosaurus

Jurassic Days: Icarosaurus

What Did Dinosaurs Sound Like?

What Did Dinosaurs Sound Like?

MESOZOIC MONTHLY: Volaticotherium

MESOZOIC MONTHLY: Volaticotherium

dire wolf display

Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era

Clues

Renovating Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era

Did you know?

Did you know?

Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era Opens

Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era Opens

Hillman Hall of Minerals and Gems

Hillman Hall of Minerals and Gems

Fungi make minerals and clean polluted water along the way!

Fungi make minerals and clean polluted water along the way!

Roll Out the Beryl

Roll Out the Beryl

Everything Pennsylvania

Everything Pennsylvania

Avengers Scavenger Hunt at the Museum

Avengers Scavenger Hunt at the Museum

Brown Bear in the Hall of North American Wildlife

Hall of North American Wildlife

The Nose that “Sees”

The Nose that “Sees”

Groundhog Day 2023

Groundhog Day 2023

Feather and Bone Connections to American History

Feather and Bone Connections to American History

Finding Answers: From Museum to Mountains and Back Again

Finding Answers: From Museum to Mountains and Back Again

Rhino in the Hall of African Wildlife

Hall of African Wildlife

World Pangolin Day 2024 – The Mysterious Mammalian “Wishbone”

World Pangolin Day 2024 – The Mysterious Mammalian “Wishbone”

World Pangolin Day 2023 – The Mysterious Brain Bone

World Pangolin Day 2023 – The Mysterious Brain Bone

GETTING FROM THE FERN HOLLOW BRIDGE TO THE FRICK FAMILY

GETTING FROM THE FERN HOLLOW BRIDGE TO THE FRICK FAMILY

A Gorilla for Our Imagination

A Gorilla for Our Imagination

Bird Hall

Travels with a Sketchbook: A Natural History Artist’s Observations at the Museum

Why Do the King Penguins in Bird Hall Look so Different from Each Other?

Why Do the King Penguins in Bird Hall Look so Different from Each Other?

A Match Made by Coevolution

A Match Made by Coevolution

mushrooms in botany hall

Botany Hall

Exploring the Role of Leaf Litter In Our Forests

Exploring the Role of Leaf Litter In Our Forests

Carnegie’s Cactus: Carnegie gigantea

Carnegie’s Cactus: Carnegie gigantea

Collected on this Day 105 years ago

Collected on this Day 105 years ago

Collected on this Day in 1966: Santa Clauses

Collected on this Day in 1966: Santa Clauses

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Polar World: Wyckoff Hall of Arctic Life

Arctic Message

Arctic Message

Are Santa’s Reindeer Real Mammals?

Are Santa’s Reindeer Real Mammals?

Face to face with a polar bear

Face to face with a polar bear

What’s This?

What’s This?

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Walton Hall of Ancient Egypt

Egypt and the Nile

Egypt and the Nile

Cats: The Archeological Site!

Cats: The Archeological Site!

Looking at Love in Ancient Egypt

Looking at Love in Ancient Egypt

The Haunted Walton Hall of Ancient Egypt and the Mystery of the Blob

The Haunted Walton Hall of Ancient Egypt and the Mystery of the Blob

Alcoa Foundation Hall of American Indians

Alcoa Foundation Hall of American Indians

Tribal Museums Day and Promoting Indigenous Authors

Tribal Museums Day and Promoting Indigenous Authors

Celebrating Indigenous Peoples’ Day 2022

Celebrating Indigenous Peoples’ Day 2022

Center Court Culture Sharing

Center Court Culture Sharing

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American Eel

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Raymond M. Alf Museum of Paleontology

Connect with the Alf Museum from the comfort of your own classrooms!

Reserve a virtual tour and discover the museum in a fun, engaging, and interactive online experience hosted by an alf museum educator. alf museum virtual tours are hosted online and require a computer/smart device, webcam, and the internet., virtual experiences.

dinosaur exhibit virtual tour

Dynamic Dinosaurs!

Designed for grades: 2nd – 4th grade Length: 30 – 45 minutes NGSS-aligned Fee: $35.00

When you think of fossils, most people think of the “terrible lizards” of the Mesozoic, the dinosaurs! In this digital field trip, Alf Museum educators help students discover some amazing dinosaur fossils from the Alf Museum collection and discuss basic principles of paleontology: what are (and aren’t) fossils; what makes a dinosaur a dinosaur; how are dinosaurs classified; and what was the world of the dinosaurs like. In this two-way interactive experience, students are encouraged to ask questions and expand their perspectives about the world of dinosaurs.

dinosaur exhibit virtual tour

Exhibit Exploration!

Designed for grades: K-12, College, and General Length: 50 ­– 60 minutes NGSS-aligned Fee: $75.00 general – $50.00 for Title 1 Schools

Join an Alf Museum educator for a trip through time as your classroom explores the virtual Alf Museum Hall of Life and Hall of Footprints! In this interactive experience, students will see some amazing fossil displays and discuss paleontological concepts like deep time, extinction, and evolution. “Exhibit Exploration” can be combined with “Dynamic Dinosaurs” for a single 60-minute experience.

dinosaur exhibit virtual tour

Self-guided Lessons

K-12 Scalable

Explore the Virtual Alf Museum with your classroom whenever you need! We have self-guided lesson plans available for educators at no-cost to use whenever is best for your students.

Fill out the form below to download a copy of the lesson plan.

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Experiences currently only offered within the United States between 9am – 3pm PST.

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Minimum number of attendees is 10. Maximum number of attendees is 100.

Reservations must be made at least 2 weeks before your preferred date.

Payment must be received 1 week before your reservation date. Pay by check only.

For information, questions, or cancellations, please contact our Tours Manager: Monique Reyes, Phone: 909-482-5229 | Email: [email protected]

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Virtual Experience

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This downloadable audio tour of the full Ridge walk is designed for ages 16 and older. Available in English and Spanish (Children’s version coming soon!). The Audio Tour includes one (1) admission to the Exhibit Hall.

360º Virtual Tour

Our virtual 360° tour allows you to explore and learn about Dinosaur Ridge in depth without leaving your living room. Designed by a former USGS geologist, this tool gives you a bird’s eye view of the Ridge and lets you zero in on the areas that fascinate you the most. FREE for a limited time!

World  /  Europe  /  Russia  / Moscow, the best

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Moscow, the best

We offer you to see virtual tour with the best panoramas of Moscow, Russia. Here you can see full virtual tour with 107 aerial panoramas.

As surprising as it may be, but Moscow, one of the most famous cities in the world, attracts only 5 million tourists a year.

Here are some numbers for comparison: Paris sees 29 million tourists a year, Berlin — 10 million tourists a year.

However, the reasons for such low interest in Moscow lies only in technical complexities of organizing the trip to Russia: there are numerous difficulties in getting visa and mysterious Russian weather often frightens sun-loving and demanding travelers. But those who do make it to the capital of Russia don't get disappointed. Moscow is Europe's largest metropolis with unforgettable atmosphere and unique historical monuments that reflect the history of Russia.

According to the legend Moscow is situated on seven hills. The Kremlin, a settlement around which the modern capital of Russia grew, is situated on one of those hills — the Borovitsky Hill. The first mention of Moscow dates back to year 1147, and since then, for almost nine centuries, the city experienced a myriad of events, and it has been destroyed and rebuilt over and over again.

The main attraction of Moscow, the famous Moscow Kremlin, was originally built from wood, but in the 14th century, after being destroyed again, it was rebuilt from a local white stone. It was from that moment on that Moscow was referred to as "Moscow of white stone" ("Moskva belokamennaya). The walls of the Kremlin were whitewashed long after white stone was replaced with burnt bricks: it was done in the memory of "Moscow of white stone", referring to the glorious part of the city's past.

At the beginning of the 16th century "the seven hills settlement" became the capital of the united Russian state, which gave stimulus to its economic and cultural growth. But while all towers and temples in Moscow were built of stone, the city fire destroyed almost all other old houses in 1812, and Moscow had to be rebuilt all over again.

Burned buildings were replaced with new ones, mostly in classical style: it's those buildings, as well as the modern style ones that were built in the end of the 19th century, that are now comprise what is called "the old Moscow ".

Architecture of the Soviet period has also left a great impact on the face of the city. The Shukhov Tower became one of the first notable sights of Moscow: a hyperboloid structure made from steel mesh shell was very innovative and bold for 1920s. Another notable landmark of the last century is the All-Russian Exhibition Center, one of the 50 largest exhibition centers in the world.

And the most famous buildings are the "Stalinist skyscrapers" — seven high-rise buildings built from the late 1940s to early 1950s. Despite the fact that the idea was taken from American skyscrapers, architects were able to create original architectural solutions, which were later called "Stalin's empire style" or "Soviet monumental classicism". Nowadays these high-rise buildings are considered to be the pinnacle of the post-war Soviet Art Deco style and the most important landmarks that end up on every photo of Moscow.

Three of the seven high-rise buildings are located near the famous Garden Ring. It's a circular avenue with circumference of 15.6 kilometers and a width of 70 meters built (paved with asphalt) on top of ancient earth mounds that were used to defend Moscow in the 16th century.

There were more than 130 rivers in Moscow, but now most of them are backfilled. However, the city can offer you very beautiful views of the water: the famous Moskva River, and the smaller Yauza River, Setun River, Shodnya River, Gorodnia River, and many others.

Bridges, just like Moscow's buildings, are unique monuments of Moscow. For example, the Crimean Bridge built in 1938 was the first of the six European bridges that is 168 meters in length. There is also the famous Borodinsky Bridge built to commemorate the Battle of Borodino. Among the most interesting modern bridges is Zhivopisny Bridge in Serebryany Bor, which has no analogues in the world. Its pylon has a form of a huge arch structure spanning from one river bank to the other at acute angle.

In 1990s the Victory Park was opened on Poklonnaya Hill to commemorate the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945). The park consists of several churches of different denominations, museums, monuments, a huge collection of military equipment, and 1418 fountains (1418 refers to number of days the war continued), which turn dark crimson during the night.

Even the shortest list of all historical landmarks and sights in Moscow will take more than one page. Moscow is a huge metropolitan city spread over an area of 2,500 square kilometers. It has numerous river and parks, narrow streets and big highways, cozy homes in classical style and cold skyscrapers. Each period gave Moscow something new: in 1940s the city was surrounded by a ring road (MKAD), in 1950s the capital saw the opening of the Olympic complex Luzhniki, in 1960s Ostankino TV tower was built in Moscow, in 1990s the largest business center called Moscow-City was built.

Moscow is the case where you just can't describe everything, and as they say, "A picture is worth a thousand words". AirPano team proudly presents panorama of Moscow, the city whose history is inextricably linked with the history of our country, and whose monuments refer to all areas of Russian culture and architecture.

Photo by Dmitry Moiseenko , Ivan Roslyakov , Stanislav Sedov , Sergey Semenov , Dmitry Chistoprudov

Moscow at night

Open Gallery

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Virtual Travels in 360°

dinosaur exhibit virtual tour

Me trasporta a esa época de la historia, de grandes hombres y Zarinas.

Maria Ceballos, Colombia

Jimena Echandi, Costa Rica

Beautiful city and tremendous job of photography and capturing the eloquence of Moscow.

Ed Nelson, USA

ABSOLUTELY SPECTACULAR

NORM LAPALME, USA

Beautiful professional presentation that shows the beautiful city of Moscow, a big thank your team

Karel Hofmann, Czech Republic

An excellent visual presentation, which reveals the delightful, magnificent splendour of Moscow, The Best

Isaac Moses, United Kingdom

karthik Reddy, India

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From Kaliningrad to Sakhalin: All about the int'l RUSSIA EXPO in Moscow

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A total of 129 displays are showcased at the exhibition space, which boasts a total area exceeding 90,000 square meters.

The opening and presentation of the new pavilions were accompanied by concerts, educational events, and master classes at VDNH. Since its opening, 868,540 people have attended the exhibition.

One of the central events on the first day was the opening of the ‘Portal to the Future’, which was attended by Larisa Dolina, Julianna Karaulova, SHAMAN, and Natalia Podolskaya. Visitors also took part in a large-scale flash-mob dance at ten VDNKH venues.

dinosaur exhibit virtual tour

Andrey Belousov, first deputy prime minister of the Russian Federation, declared that shifting the consciousness of citizens to focus on the future was modern Russia’s most important achievement.

On November 5, he spoke at the ‘Knowledge First’ educational marathon held by Russia’s ‘Knowledge’ society, which took place as part of RUSSIA EXPO.

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“Today we are proud that among our country’s many achievements, we see the people’s mood shifting to a strong focus on the future. This is very important motivation. After all, if you look at where we were a quarter of a century ago, mired in some sense of hopelessness, this transition to a forward-looking spirit is truly impressive,”   Belousov noted.

Cultural, entertainment, educational, and business programs are all planned during RUSSIA EXPO, which will continue until April 12. There will also be Russian Region Days, when various parts of Russia will demonstrate their economic, cultural, and tourism potential. In addition, wedding ceremonies will take place according to national traditions.

dinosaur exhibit virtual tour

In 2024, Russian Economy Days will take place from January 15 to February 9, and a National Achievements Forum will be held from February 12 to March 7.

At culinary festivals, visitors will be able to sample the diversity and specifics of the cuisines of various Russian peoples. A market will offer visitors a wide selection of goods from Russia’s regions, including food, handmade souvenirs, musical instruments, and clothing.

As part of the exposition, there will be illustrative examples of advanced Russian achievements, including the Crimean Bridge, the Russian Bridge, Moscow City, the Sirius education center and Skolkovo Innovation Center, the   Lenin   nuclear icebreaker, the   Akademik Treshnikov   scientific research vessel, the MS-21 aircraft, perinatal center, the Almazov National Medical Center, the Burdenko Neurosurgery Center, ‘Gosuslugi’ public service centers, Yandex’s and Sber’s digital ecosystems, the Vostochny Cosmodrome, and the Arctic-M satellite, as well as the Arkhyz, Rosa Khutor, Dombay, Sheregesh, Krasnaya Polyana, and Manzherok resorts.

Russia on the map

On arriving at RUSSIA EXPO, visitors will be greeted by an embroidered map of Russia.

Natalia Virtuozova, the director of exhibitions highlighting Russia’s 21st century achievements, said the Live Map consists of kinetic elements, which will accommodate all of Russia’s 89 constituencies.

“Just as the Russia exhibition shows all the richness of the regions through displays, the embroidered map reflects their cultural diversity through patterns. Therefore, we decided to present it in the form of a work of art that will meet our guests right at the entrance to VDNH,”   Virtuozova said.

dinosaur exhibit virtual tour

In 1939, the first embroidered map of the Chuvash Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was presented at the All-Union Agricultural Exhibition. The craftsmen of Algeshevo’s ‘Paha Tere’ factory worked on the map for a year. It is now preserved in the Museum of Chuvash Embroidery.

In 2022, a map of the whole of Russia was hand-embroidered with the support of Russia’s Ministry of Culture and Federal Agency for Nationalities. The country’s new regions have also joined the project, with the Donetsk and Lugansk People's Republics, as well as Zaporozhye and Kherson Regions, included on the map.

dinosaur exhibit virtual tour

Svetlana Kalikova, Chuvashia’s minister of culture, noted that the embroidered map of Russia was created with the help of craftsmen from all over the country. It’s now part of Russia’s museum collection and preserved in the Chuvash National Museum.

“It is a great honor for us that the brainchild of Chuvashia is so highly valued and recognized as a symbol of our country’s unity and cultural diversity that will become the hallmark of large-scale projects like RUSSIA EXPO,"   said Kalikova.

Chuvashia will display its strengths in culture and tourism at the exhibition, as well as its potential for investment and industry – all that the republic has achieved over the past 20 years as part of a larger Russian family.

At Irkutsk Region’s stand, there will be a lottery draw for a trip to Lake Baikal.

“There will be a drawing for a comprehensive tour package to Lake Baikal, as well as 12 more vouchers for accommodation, excursions, and other services,”   said Evgenia Naidenova, head of Irkutsk Region’s tourism agency.

In addition, a presentation of opportunities for tourism, including business events and meetings with regional tour operators, are planned at the exhibition.

dinosaur exhibit virtual tour

Krasnodar Region’s stand offers visitors a virtual journey and active entertainment. Thanks to virtual technology, it will be possible to see the region’s sights and admire the beauty of its nature, as well as learn about the region’s modern achievements. Guests will be able to snap a selfie against the backdrop of the famous Crimean Bridge and take virtual tours of a cheese factory and winery.

“Our region is one of the leaders in socio-economic development. We have something to show and be proud of. At RUSSIA EXPO, we will present our innovations and achievements in industry, agriculture, health spas, education, healthcare, culture, and sports,”   said Veniamin Kondratiev, governor of Krasnodar Region.

Vladimir Region has prepared a unique white-stone stand combining traditional architecture and modernity.

The aim of the region’s exhibition is to present its history and modern achievements. The exhibit is based on Vladimir’s world-famous Church of the Intercession on the Nerl – a 12th-century masterpiece made from white stone.

dinosaur exhibit virtual tour

“We have created a modern interpretation of this church, which will represent white stone portals with digital technologies,”   said Olga Semonenko, the Vladimir Region stand’s project manager.

Voronezh Region will present an immersive video show with full immersion in virtual reality.

The video project will take visitors on some real adventures: a parachute jump, a rocket launch into space, and a colorful fireworks display await guests virtual space. And most importantly, you’ll be able to see Voronezh Region without leaving VDNH.

Culinary Program

As part of the food festivals, a giant cake weighing 45kg with a diameter of 1.5 meters will be prepared at the exhibition, where visitors will have the opportunity to try Tomsk Region’s signature delicacy.

dinosaur exhibit virtual tour

Pastry chef Anastasia Charkova will prepare a honey cake with roasted cedar, honeysuckle sauce, and a willow herb-tea custard in front of guests. The unusual dessert has long been a signature treat in Tomsk Region.

In addition, delicacies from all over the country await guests at the fair, where farmers will sell their best products: cheeses, honey, sausages, and much more.

More than 2,000 guides participating in a ‘Guides to Meaning’ contest will help visitors learn about the achievements and successes of their native land.

For six months, guides will tell visitors about important centuries in Russian history and their country’s 21st-century achievements in an interactive format.

dinosaur exhibit virtual tour

In addition to the sightseeing tours, a theatrical performance by actors in polyphonic audio format is planned.

About 50 guides will be on hand to answer visitors’ questions and tell them about RUSSIA EXPO’s program of events every day.

Exhibition tours will be offered in six languages: Russian, English, Spanish, French, Chinese, and Arabic.

On the   russia.ru   website, there is a page showing RUSSIA EXPO events, where you can sign up for tours. The section will be updated regularly for the convenience of visitors.

RUSSIA EXPO

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David H. Koch Hall of Fossils - Deep Time: Enhanced Virtual Tour Fossil List

This is select list of fossils and other assets featured on the improved virtual tour of the David H. Koch Hall of Fossils (Deep Time) that has been enhanced with close-ups of educational content from the exhibit: fossils, videos, murals, and text panels.

Deep Time Main Entrance

The not-so-distant past, neogene fish, familiar plants, costs and benefits of living large, life in the neogene ocean, neogene shells, end cretaceous mass extinction event and view of early horse and green river fossils, green river case, dinosaur diversity peaks / cretaceous seas 2, bird origins / cretaceous seas 1, cretaceous fish, cretaceous invertebrates, flight evolution, stegosaurus spikes vs. ceratosaurus claws, jurassic marine reptiles, reptiles move back to the ocean in the jurassic, jurassic marine invertebrates, jurassic fish, triassic marine fauna, dinosaur evolution and trees of the triassic, a riot of evolution after a mass extinction, more triassic specimens, permian extinction 1, jurassic dinosaurs, plants, and insects, plant and insect interaction, evolution of angiosperms: early , middle , late, main circulation path and age of humans bridge, life flourishes at a river’s edge, t. rex and the last american dinosaurs: 1, microvertebrate fossils, hell creek plants, asteroid impact triggers dinosaur mass extinction, extinction timeline, rainforests spread across the globe, primates and fruits, mastodon and the main path [hallway], a giant ground sloth, ice age extinction event: 1, isthmus of panama specimens, ice age mastodon, petm plants, ice age extinction event: 2, a giant deer and a bison mummy, overlook of the whole exhibition, age of humans, extinction and evolution over deep time, polar forests, polar forest fossils, life changes in the permian, permian plant fossils, sharks and shark relatives, importance of insects, carboniferous arthropods, carboniferous snails, fossils and coal in the carboniferous world, carboniferous plants, carboniferous trees, your body through time, evolution of life in the ocean and on land, early life in the ocean, cambrian fossils, ordovician fossils, late silurian to early devonian fossils, middle to late devonian fossils, more devonian fossils, what is life, early life rocks, secondary entrance from african voices.

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The Tree of Life, Bahrain 360 Virtual Tour

Explore the  360-degree virtual reality tour of the tree of life, bahrain ..

The Tree of Life or Shajarat-al-Hayat in Bahrain is a remarkable tree, a tree in the desert. Located 10 km from Askar and some 3.5 km west from Jaww, this 32-foot tall Prosopis cineraria has been making a seemingly impossible living out of dry sand for approximately 400 years. There is no apparent source of water or other vegetation for miles around. The mystery of the survival of the tree has made it a legend.

Most members of the Prosopis genus are native to America and they have a common name – mesquites. Prosopis cineraria, however, are native to Asia. These trees are known to adapt extremely well to dry deserts and thrive in arid conditions, with rainfall as low as 150mm annually. But they have deep root systems – sometimes going up to 50 meters down – capable of reaching deep beds of underground water.

The mystery status of the Tree of Life in Bahrain is somewhat exaggerated. The ground, where the tree grows, is just some 9 – 12 m above sea level and the groundwater level in this location is higher than sea level. Not too far from the tree are seen ponds with water. The air here often is also humid – and Mesquite is well adapted to gain moisture from the air as well. A closer inspection of the area shows other trees nearby. One smaller tree grows some 850 meters to the north of the Tree of Life.

Local stories tell that the Tree of Life was planted here in 1583. The tree survived up to this day. It looks very healthy and has fresh, green leaves. It grows on a small sand hill looks majestic in the harsh desert and is visible from far away.

The tree is a local tourist attraction, as it is the only major tree growing in the area. 50,000 tourists visit every year and the tree often is damaged by graffiti carvings.

Created by    Leen Thobias      P4Panorama    

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COMMENTS

  1. Virtual Tour of Dino Hall

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  3. Natural History Museum (New Dinosaur Exhibit) Walking Tour in 4K

    Join me for a virtual tour in high-resolution 4K through one of the best museums in D.C. The Natural History Museum holds the distinction of being the world...

  4. Current Exhibits

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  5. Dinosaur Hall

    Visitors to the Natural History Museum can see the pregnant plesiosaur on display in the Dinosaur Hall. The specimen is 15.5 feet wide and 8 feet tall. It is the only pregnant plesiosaur fossil ever discovered. Incredible animals of all kinds evolved alongside dinosaurs. See the fossilized remains of gargantuan reptiles that stalked the ...

  6. Griffin Halls of Evolving Planet & SUE the T. rex

    Anchor: #45-billion-years-27000-square-feet-of-evolutionary-exploration 4.5 billion years. 27,000 square feet of evolutionary exploration. In the Griffin Halls of Evolving Planet, get to know the many creatures that have roamed the earth throughout history, from single-celled organisms to our extended human family.Experience a variety of fossils, animated videos, and interactive displays that ...

  7. Narrated Virtual Tours

    Videos in This Playlist. Exhibit Introduction. Carcharocles megalodon. North Atlantic Right Whale (Phoenix) Indo-Pacific Coral Reef. Virtual Tour for Students. Related Resources: Sant Ocean Hall. Join us for narrated video tours of the various exhibits and halls of the Museum, including Objects of Wonder, the Sant Ocean Hall, and Human Origins.

  8. Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History Virtual Tour

    HTML5 Browser with WebGL or CSS3D support required! Welcome to the 4th revision of the Smithsonian's Virtual Tour of the Natural History Museum. This is a work focused on turning the tours into STEM courseware. The eventual media-rich tour of the new hall is a collaboration between The Smithsonian and Loren Ybarrondo.

  9. Amid All the Fossils, Smithsonian's New Dinosaur Exhibition Tells the

    Picking up the timeline from there, the exhibition journeys back through the 40 million-year-old hothouse world of the Eocene, the heyday of giant Jurassic dinosaurs 150 million years ago, and the ...

  10. Tour the Exhibits Digitally

    Did you know that Carnegie Museum of Natural History's Cenozoic Era: Age of Mammals exhibition contains more than 30 mounted real fossil … Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era Opens Friends of Carnegie Museum of Natural History celebrated the reopening of a popular exhibition hall this weekend and honored Joe and Kathy …

  11. Virtual Experiences

    Reserve a virtual tour and discover the Museum in a fun, engaging, and interactive online experience hosted by an Alf Museum educator. ... and the internet. VIRTUAL EXPERIENCES. Dynamic Dinosaurs! Designed for grades: 2nd - 4th grade Length: 30 - 45 minutes NGSS-aligned Fee: $35.00. ... Exhibit Exploration! Designed for grades: K-12 ...

  12. Dinosaurs and Natural World virtual tour

    Take a virtual tour of our Dinosaurs and Natural World Gallery. Take a virtual tour of our Dinosaurs and Natural World Gallery. toggle site navigation. National Museums Liverpool. Main menu. Visit show venues. Museum of Liverpool World Museum International Slavery Museum Maritime Museum Walker Art Gallery Sudley House Lady Lever Art Gallery.

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    The Museum virtual tour is composed of over 750,000 high definition images stitched together! Look For. ... The exhibition Outbreak: Epidemics in a Connected World invites you to join epidemiologists, veterinarians, public health workers, and citizens as they rush to identify and respond to infectious diseases, such as COVID-19, HIV/AIDS, Ebola ...

  14. Distance Learning

    Virtual Field Trips are broadcast from the Quarry Exhibit Hall at Dinosaur National Monument, where over 1,500 dinosaur bones from the Late Jurassic Period are on display. We can cover a variety of topics related to the park, including dinosaurs, fossils, paleontology, evolution, deep time, geology, ecology, desert habitats, the National Park ...

  15. Dinos Alive Exhibit

    Dinos Alive Exhibit - Immersive Experience. The dinosaur exhibition that takes you back millions of years to a land ruled by giants! Choose your city. 🦕 Go back millions of years to a land ruled by giants! This immersive experience brings you face to face with spectacular dinosaurs of the Jurassic.

  16. Public Tours

    Saturdays: 12:00 P.m.(November-May) A 2.5-hour (1.5 mile) walking tour led by a professional or amateur geologist. The tour includes an in-depth discussion of the geology and changes of the Denver area through time as well as the interpretation of the dinosaur track and fossil sites. Show your ticket to be transported via shuttle bus to the ...

  17. Virtual Experience

    The Audio Tour includes one (1) admission to the Exhibit Hall. Learn More. 360º Virtual Tour. Our virtual 360° tour allows you to explore and learn about Dinosaur Ridge in depth without leaving your living room. ... Virtual Programs & Resources. Dinosaur Ridge offers virtual classroom programs and at home virtual learning opportunities for ...

  18. Moscow virtual tour: VR cinema opens at VDNKh's Smart City Pavilion

    Visit it for free without prior registration from Tuesday to Sunday (10:00 a. m.-8:00 p. m). A VR cinema has opened at the VDNKh's Smart City Pavilion. Moscow residents and attendees of the Russia International Exhibition and Forum can take an exciting virtual tour along six routes organized jointly with the Get to Know Moscow project.

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    Sea Monsters Unearthed: Life in Angola's Ancient Seas. Get up close to the fossil remains of giant reptiles—mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, and sea turtles— that once ruled the sea off the coast of West Africa 88 - 66 million years ago. Image Credit: Karen Carr Studio Inc. for the Paleo Angola Project and SeaMonsters Unearthed.

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    Moscow, the best. We offer you to see virtual tour with the best panoramas of Moscow, Russia. Here you can see full virtual tour with 107 aerial panoramas. As surprising as it may be, but Moscow, one of the most famous cities in the world, attracts only 5 million tourists a year. Here are some numbers for comparison: Paris sees 29 million ...

  21. From Kaliningrad to Sakhalin: All about the int'l RUSSIA EXPO in Moscow

    In addition, a presentation of opportunities for tourism, including business events and meetings with regional tour operators, are planned at the exhibition. Kristina Kormilitsina/Sputnik

  22. Deep Time Enhanced Virtual Tour Fossil List

    Virtual Tour. Current Exhibits. Deep Time Enhanced Virtual Tour Fossil List. This is select list of fossils and other assets featured on the improved virtual tour of the David H. Koch Hall of Fossils (Deep Time) that has been enhanced with close-ups of educational content from the exhibit: fossils, videos, murals, and text panels.

  23. Tree of Life, Bahrain

    Explore the 360-degree virtual reality tour of the Tree of Life, Bahrain.. The Tree of Life or Shajarat-al-Hayat in Bahrain is a remarkable tree, a tree in the desert. Located 10 km from Askar and some 3.5 km west from Jaww, this 32-foot tall Prosopis cineraria has been making a seemingly impossible living out of dry sand for approximately 400 years.