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Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era

April 2, 2018 by wpengine

Clues

By Amy Henrici

Collection Managers often solve fossil mysteries, and sometimes we have only a few clues to assist us. A recent mystery involved some rib fragments prepared by PaleoLab volunteers. Individual packages containing rib fragments found in an old cardboard box stashed in a Vertebrate Paleontology storage room proved to be perfect for PaleoLab volunteers to hone their preparation skills.

My task as Collection Manager is to catalog and integrate these ribs into the fossil mammal collection. Fortunately, most of the rib packages contained field labels, which are used to record information when the specimen is collected. My first clue came from the Description category of a field label with one of the rib packages, and it indicated that the rib connected with a block (which consists of fossil and rock). Because there are no blocks of unprepared fossil mammals in storage, I had to assume that this block had been prepared and the specimen was cataloged. The field label lacked a catalog number (Department No. on the label) and any locality information, which would normally assist in locating the rest of the specimen.

old label for a museum specimen

This field label must have been printed for an expedition to Brazil, and the left overs were used by all museum expeditions until they ran out.

The only clue that I had to link the rib to a cataloged specimen in the Section’s computerized database was the block number (Blk. 11/1931), which are entered in the field number category of the database. A search of the database retrieved two specimens with this field number, CM 6425 and CM 36355. Both were brontotheres, formerly known as titanotheres, which are large, extinct rhinoceros-like herbivores. I located the specimens in the collections, and both included incomplete ribs. The field label shown here mentioned that the rib made contact with a “…portion in block indicated by letter D”. Amazingly, I found the letter D written on the broken end of a rib cataloged as CM 6425, and the rib fragment associated with the field label connects to it. I was able to fit all of the rib pieces prepared in PaleoLab onto other ribs cataloged as CM 6425.

two parts of a rib bone being held together
The rib piece held in the left hand fits onto a piece stored in this drawer. Both have the letter D written on them at the point where they join. (Photograph taken by Norm Wuerthele)

 

black and white image of a large mamal skelleton
Archive image showing the skeleton of the brontothere, Brontops dispar, CM 767, which can be seen on exhibit in Cenozoic Hall.

Amy Henrici is the Collection Manager for Vertebrate Paleontology at Carnegie Museum of Natural History. Museum employees are encouraged to blog about their unique experiences of working at the museum.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era, Amy Henrici, Paleolab

February 26, 2018 by wpengine

Renovating Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era

exhibition under construction

Carnegie Museum of Natural History’s exhibition team has been working on renovating parts of Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era which features fascinating fossils of some animal relatives you may be familiar with–like the 55-million-year old ancestors of horses and giant ground sloths!

The renovated parts of this exhibition should be back on display by March 10th. To learn more about it in the meantime, check out our relevant blogs.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era, Cenozoic Hall, ice age mammals

February 26, 2018 by wpengine

Did you know?

skelleton of an ice age mammal

Did you know that Carnegie Museum of Natural History’s Cenozoic Era: Age of Mammals exhibition contains more than 30 mounted real fossil skeletons that range in age from roughly 50 million to a few thousand years old? Most of these were collected by museum staff.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era, Cenozoic Hall

September 11, 2017 by wpengine

Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era Opens

ice age mammal

Joe and Kathy Guyaux with Eric Dorfman

hall re-opening event

Museum director shaking hands with visitors

children digging in bonehunters' quarry

mammoth skeleton

Friends of Carnegie Museum of Natural History celebrated the reopening of a popular exhibition hall this weekend and honored Joe and Kathy Guyaux, whose generous gift made it possible.

On August 27, guests and VIPs celebrated the reopening of the exhibition hall Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era. The gallery now features additional scientific information about the amazing mammals that lived during the Cenozoic Era, a fresh coat of paint, and new signage. Highlights include a fossil skeleton of a Columbian mammoth and fossils of a saber-toothed cat, dire wolf, and giant ground sloth.

Adults mingled and enjoyed coffee and pastries, while kids had fun digging for fossils like real paleontologists in the reopened Bonehunters’ Quarry.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era, Bonehunters' Quarry

September 8, 2017 by wpengine

Can you dig it?

New sign for Bone Hunters' Quarry
Can you dig it? The exhibition hall, Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era, has a new look that includes this fun logo for Bonehunters’ Quarry. The popular exhibit that invites kids to dig for fossils in a recreation of Dinosaur National Monument in Utah is now reopened after several months of updates.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era

August 31, 2017 by wpengine

Mammals that existed millions of years ago

Display in Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era

Learn all about the mammals that existed millions of years ago in the newly renovated exhibition hall, Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Age of Mammals: The Cenozoic Era

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