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AMNH IP- Mackenzie (CC Intern) at the Museum (AMNH)

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It has been a wonderful last few weeks at AMNH! I went on a tour around the Vertebrate Paleontology Department and got to walk through their fossil preparation lab as well as some of their collections. I was a fossil preparation intern at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science a couple years ago, and got to explore some of their vertebrate paleontology collections during my time there. Still, seeing the process of removing a fossil from the surrounding matrix, or the final product safely stored in collections, never ceases to amaze me.     Sauropod tail bones, Late Jurassic, Wyoming                      Holotype skull of  Anchiceratops ornatus , Late Cretaceous, Alberta       Background: Skull model from original  Brontosaurus  mount (or facsimile thereof) Middle ground; Dinosaur long bone Foreground: Cast of Late Jurassic  Camarasaurus  skull The collections space we were...

AMNH IP- Mackenzie (CC Intern) at the Museum (AMNH)

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It has been quite the exciting week! On Wednesday alone I attended two presentations and got a tour of the Earth and Planetary Sciences department. The talks were both really interesting! Dr. Kate Kiseeva presented on "Probing the Deep Earth: Insights from Mantle Xenoliths and Inclusions in Diamonds". I learned a lot during that talk, I previously had very little knowledge of inclusions in diamonds, let alone how one would study them! Another talk was given by Stephanie Pierce from Harvard and was titled "Functional Adaptive Landscapes (Help) Illuminate Major Transitions in Vertebrate Evolution". This talk was also very enlightening regarding the specifics of what changes animals underwent during these transitions. The tour around the Earth and Planetary Sciences department was excellent. Nicole Childs, the Collections Manager in the department, had a wide range of knowledge about all of the collections we visited. We started in the rock collections, and all of the ...

AMNH IP- Mackenzie (CC Intern) at the Museum (AMNH)

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The highlight of this week was definitely the tour Bushra and I went on around Invertebrate Zoology! Corey Smith, a Senior Museum Specialist in the department, showed us all around the Insect collection of pinned specimens. We started with the beetles, which is what Corey now works on, and I was amazed by the diversity of specimens we saw! We saw some of the largest beetles on the planet, about the width of my fist, as well as some of the smallest, about the size of an ant. I remarked that if I had seen a lot of these outside, I would not have guessed they were beetles, but rather a weird insect I was not familiar with. Corey said he thinks that is not an uncommon way people think. But going forward, I will now be able to hazard a guess that weird insect is actually a beetle!       Drawer of goliath beetles (Scarabaeidae)                           Drawer of longhorn beetles (Cerambycidae)     ...

AMNH IP- Mackenzie (CC Intern) at the Museum (AMNH)

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 Hi, my name is Mackenzie Boyd! I recently graduated from Colorado College (CC) with a Bachelor of Arts in Geology. I also grew up in Colorado and have always been curious about the natural features around me. I have had an interest in Geology since I was four years old, at which time I would tell people that "when I grow up, I want to be a geologist! And a mermaid" I grew out of the mermaid idea, but geology and the natural sciences have continued to hold a special place in my heart. To be able to read the stories of the rocks, to understand what the Earth was like at a different time, has been such a gift in my life. I started at the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) in New York City four weeks ago, (thanks to the Noblett-Witter Family Internship offered by CC); and so far, I have been looking at a much different period in Earth's history than I had ever studied previously. I have been looking in the Paleozoic, specifically the Devonian and Mississippian, and th...