Las Vegas Natural History Museum
If your love for animals extends beyond house pets, then a trip to the Las Vegas Natural History Museum is for you.
Here you'll see everything from a real wooly mammoth tooth and a shark jaw bone to exhibits on just about every wild animal under the sun. The Las Vegas Natural History Museum features so much information and so many lifelike replicas of extinct and present day animals that you'll feel like you're at the zoo.
If we listed and explained every animal in here, you'd be as old as the dinosaurs on display! Luckily, the various rooms make exploring the museum easy. If you're into sea creatures, you'll learn about whales in the Marine Life Gallery and see huge whale models hanging from the ceiling. For instance, mother whales not only teach their young, but play with them too. For faster travel, the baby hangs on to its mother's fins as she rides through the waves. You can also push buttons to hear the sounds of a humpback whale, killer whale, pilot whale and dolphin.
In this same area, there's a pool filled with live baby sharks and sting rays. Shark feeding is Saturday at 2 p.m. and Tuesday and Thursday at 2:30 p.m. Just steps away, there is a wall full of fish tanks, an eel tank and a shark egg hatchery.
The International Wildlife Room groups the wild cats and wild dogs right next to each other. While domestic dogs (for the most part) chase house cats, it's a different story in the wild. Wolves, coyotes and foxes can't hide their claws, while wildcats like lions, tigers, leopards and jaguars can tuck their claws and hunt in silence. The wildlife room also includes deer, polar bears, brown bears and black bears. You can feel the texture of a black bear's fur.
Across the way, the Wild Nevada Gallery includes plant and animal life native to Southern Nevada including bighorn sheep, coyotes and kit foxes.
It's one thing to see wild animals on Animal Planet, Discovery Channel or even in movies, but it's a completely different experience walking through this museum. Seeing it for yourself gives you a newfound appreciation for the animals, as well as their unique history and environment.
Before you leave, make sure to check out "Treasures of Egypt," a 4,000-square-foot exhibit displaying replica Egyptian artifacts. See 500 replicas, including King Tut's golden throne, shrine and chariots. One of the most striking pieces is the gold-painted sarcophagus, which sits atop King Tut's tomb. Experience a walk through Pharaoh Tutankhamun's burial chamber and toy with an interactive mummy scan.
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