Museum Open House
Museum of Natural History is opening their doors to homeschooling families! (SAMPLE CALENDAR LISTING)
• Menominee Clans exhibit by artist James F. Frechette, Jr. and Interactive Menominee Clans Story
• Geologic rocks and minerals collection
• Dioramas depicting endemic wildlife and related ecosystems
• Native American exhibits and rotating selections from the UW-Stevens Point native cultures collections
• One of the last passenger pigeons hunted in Wisconsin
• 1800’s era Schoenbeck Egg Collection
• Life-like African savanna and waterhole exhibits
• A northern Wisconsin forest
• Wisconsin pond, wetland, and prairie grassland
• Muskeg tundra
• Southwestern desert
• Rocks and minerals of Wisconsin
• A full-size Allosaurus skeleton (smaller cousin to T-Rex)
• North American fossils
• North American insects
• Raptors of Wisconsin
• Insects from the 50 million-year-old Green River Formation
• Other intriguing exhibits!
UW Stevens Point Museum of Natural History Sample Homeschool Group Web Site info@homeschool-life.com false mm/dd/yyyy aUinrLWZczwYavqgBmQP30959Date – Time
July 29, 2017
– 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Location
UW Stevens Point Museum of Natural History
123 Any Street
Stevens Point, WI 54401 US
Additional Information
Museum of Natural History is opening their doors to homeschooling families! (SAMPLE CALENDAR LISTING)
• Menominee Clans exhibit by artist James F. Frechette, Jr. and Interactive Menominee Clans Story
• Geologic rocks and minerals collection
• Dioramas depicting endemic wildlife and related ecosystems
• Native American exhibits and rotating selections from the UW-Stevens Point native cultures collections
• One of the last passenger pigeons hunted in Wisconsin
• 1800’s era Schoenbeck Egg Collection
• Life-like African savanna and waterhole exhibits
• A northern Wisconsin forest
• Wisconsin pond, wetland, and prairie grassland
• Muskeg tundra
• Southwestern desert
• Rocks and minerals of Wisconsin
• A full-size Allosaurus skeleton (smaller cousin to T-Rex)
• North American fossils
• North American insects
• Raptors of Wisconsin
• Insects from the 50 million-year-old Green River Formation
• Other intriguing exhibits!