Text and logo of nature.ca. Canadian Museum of Nature. Text: Discover Nature!
Text: Our Amazing Treasures. Photo of a diamond. Collage of images: photo of a skull of Daspletosaurus torosus CMNFV 8506; illustration of a burying beetle, Nicrophorus sayi; photo of purple saxifrage, Saxifraga oppositifolia.
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Text: Fossils. Photo of a model of Daspletosaurus torosus.


Head of Daspletosaurus torosus model.

Daspletosaurus torosus
The Canadian Museum of Nature brings Daspletosaurus torosus to life in the amazing story of this dinosaur, with the aid of a skeleton and a dramatic fleshed-out, full-sized model.

New Horned Dinosaur, Chasmosaurus irvinensis
Kieran Shepherd, Manager of Nature's Earth Sciences Collection, chose this specimen because it's a brand-new dinosaur, previously unknown to science.

Lateral view of the skull of Chasmosaurus irvinensis CMNFV41357.
Model of Pteranodon longiceps.

Flying Reptile, Pteranodon longiceps
Canadian Museum of Nature palaeontologist Steve Cumbaa worked closely with two sculptors, our fossil collection and some of the world's palaeo-experts to bring the extinct flying reptile Pteranodon longiceps to "life" through a blend of art and science. Learn more about how these sculptures came to be created, and how these extinct creatures -- with a wingspan of an ultralight airplane -- might have lived.

Coelacanth, Coelacanthus banffensis & Whitea sp.
Despite the global distribution in the fossil record of coelacanth fishes, Research Scientist Steve Cumbaa notes that the Canadian Museum of Nature holds in its collection exemplary specimens of two fossil coelacanths known from Canada.

Coelacanth, Coelacanthus banffesis.

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