Permanent Exhibitions Fossil Hall
Visitor Information
Hall of Vertebrate MammalsLocated on Floor 4
Fossil Halls
Saurischian Dinosarus
Ornithischian Dinosaurs
Primitive Mammals
Advanced Mammals
Vertebrate Origins
Eryops, An Early Tetrapod

Immediately adjacent to the Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Orientation Center, which includes the video presentation The Evolution of Vertebrates, the Hall of Vertebrate Origins tells the story of the burgeoning of vertebrates through the oceans and onto land, an evolutionary sequence stretching back more than 500 million years. The development of some of the most basic, yet revolutionary, physical characteristics—the backbone, jaws, limbs, and the ability to reproduce without returning to the water—was key to the evolution of life on Earth and is examined in the Hall of Vertebrate Origins. The Hall traces the evolution of such stunningly varied creatures as the first vertebrates to walk on land, the first vertebrates to live entirely on land, and the first flying vertebrates. Highlights include Buettneria, one of the earliest four-limbed animals; the massive armored early fish Dunkleosteus; the gigantic aquatic turtle known as Stupendemys; and Pteranodon, a flying reptile, or pterosaur, with a wingspan of 23 feet.

Learn more about the Fossil Halls.

Fossil Halls
Rose Center
Culture Halls
Mammal Halls
Biodiversity
Bird Halls
Dioramas
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