
The Auburn University Museum of Natural History has initiated a new program, “First Wednesdays,” providing an opportunity for the community to explore the approximately two million specimens found in the museum’s eight collections. On the first Wednesday of every month, tours are available by appointment from 4 to 6 p.m. During the tour, items from the museum’s collections will be on display and staff will be on hand to answer questions.
Museum tours are ideal for large groups and can be customized to complement specific topics such as “carnivores, omnivores and herbivores” or “reptiles and amphibians.” A conference room and classroom are also available, providing a setting for activities such as live-animal presentations. The museum welcomes school groups. Educational groups can also contact museum staff to schedule tours at other times during the week. Staff members are certified in educational programs like Project Learning Tree, Project Wild, Project Wet, Project Flying Wild and Growing up Wild, among others.
The state of Alabama boasts more than 4,500 identified species, most of which are included among the museums eight collections, including fishes; mammals; arachnids and myriapods; aquatic invertebrates; plants; amphibians and reptiles; birds and insects. As a collections-based museum, the specimens are primarily used by Auburn University professors, students and researchers from around the world conducting biodiversity research.
The Museum of Natural History is housed in the Biodiversity Learning Center, a new 15,000-square-foot facility on the Auburn University campus. The Biodiversity Learning Center is located between M. White Smith Hall and Rouse Life Sciences Building and is accessible from Mell Street.
There is no fee to participate in First Wednesdays. To register, go tohttp://aumnh.org/visit_the_museum/.
For more information or to register a large group, contact Kay Stone at (334) 844-4132 or stonemk@auburn.edu.