Naturmuseum Senckenberg

Museum of natural history in Frankfurt From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Naturmuseum Senckenberg (SMF)[7] is a museum of natural history, located in Frankfurt am Main. It is the second-largest natural history museum in Germany. In the two years 2022–2023, 874,276 people visited the museum, which is owned by the Senckenberg Nature Research Society.[8] Senckenberg's slogan is "world of biodiversity".[9] As of 2019, the museum exhibits 18 reconstructed dinosaurs.[10]

Former name
Öffentliches Naturalienkabinett
Established1821
LocationSenckenberganlage 25, Frankfurt, Germany
Coordinates50°07′03″N 8°39′06″E
Quick facts Former name, Established ...
Naturmuseum Senckenberg
The Naturmuseum Senckenberg in 2021
Former name
Öffentliches Naturalienkabinett
Established1821
LocationSenckenberganlage 25, Frankfurt, Germany
Coordinates50°07′03″N 8°39′06″E
TypeNatural history
Key holdingsTriceratops (skulls), Edmontosaurus mummy SMF R 4036, Psittacosaurus SMF R 4970, Diplodocus SMF R 462, Placodus gigas SMF R 1035, Eurohippus messelensis SMF ME 11034, Dodo, Quagga
CollectionsDinosaurs, Insects, Birds, Reptiles, Mammals, Human evolution, Messel Research
Collection size
  • 40,800,000 specimens[1]
  • 10,000 exhibits[2]
Visitors
  • 874,276 (2022–2023)[3]
  • 220,740 (2021)[1]
  • 196,160 (2020)[4]
  • 398,754 (2019)[5]
  • 363,244 (2018)[6]
FounderSenckenberg Nature Research Society, (namesake: Johann Christian Senckenberg)
DirectorEva Roßmanith
ArchitectLudwig Neher
OwnerSenckenberg Nature Research Society
Employees843[1]
Public transit access
Websitemuseumfrankfurt.senckenberg.de
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History

In 1763, Johann Christian Senckenberg donated 95,000 guilders–his entire fortune–to establish a community hospital and promote scientific projects.[11][12] Senckenberg died in 1772. In 1817, 32 Frankfurt citizens founded the non-profit Senckenberg Nature Research Society, German: Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung (SGN), which is a member of the Leibniz Association.[13][14][15] Soon after the society's founding, Johann Georg Neuburg [de] donated his collection of bird and mammal specimens to the society.[14] The Naturmuseum Senckenberg was founded in 1821, just four years later.[a][17] Initially located near the Eschenheimer Turm,[18] the museum moved to a new building on Senckenberganlage in 1907.[19] In 1896 a mummified Egyptian child in their collection (inventory number ÄS 18) was the subject of the first mummy X-ray.[20] During World War II, the building was partly destroyed.[b] However, the exhibits had been evacuated before.[14]

Building

The neo-baroque building[21] housing the Senckenberg Museum was erected between 1904 and 1907 by Ludwig Neher [de] outside the city center of Frankfurt in the same area as the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, which was founded in 1914.[22] The museum is owned and operated by the Senckenberg Nature Research Society.[23] The exhibition area covers 6,000 m2 (65,000 ft2).[24]

Source:[25]

Expansion plans

As of 2018, the museum has been expanded to 10,000 m2 (110,000 ft2).[c][27] New planned sections: Human, Earth, Cosmos, Future.[28][29]

Directors

  • 2006–2019 Bernd Herkner[30]
  • 2021–2024 Brigitte Franzen [de][31][32][33]
  • 2024–present Eva Roßmanith (Interim)[34]

General directors, Senckenberg Nature Research Society

  • 2006–2021 Volker Mosbrugger [de][35]
  • 2021–present Klement Tockner [de][36]

Collections

The Senckenberg Museum Frankfurt has a large collection of animal, plant[37] and geology[38] exhibits from every epoch of Earth's history.

Dinosaurs

Diplodocus

Main attraction is a Diplodocus from Bone Cabin Quarry, Wyoming,[39][40] donated by the American Museum of Natural History on the occasion of the present museum building's inauguration on 13 October 1907,[16][41][42] The 18 m (59 ft) mounted skeleton with additions contains bones of three different sauropod genera (Diplodocus and closely related Apatosaurus and Barosaurus).[39][43]

Psittacosaurus

As of 2022, a key holding is a fossilized Psittacosaurus (specimen SMF R 4970) from Liaoning, China, with clear bristles around its tail and visible fossilized stomach contents.[44][45][46] The specimen was first reported in 2002.[45][47] The exact date and locality of the discovery within Liaoning is unknown.[44] A controversial debate regarding the legal ownership arose.[44][48] In 2021, researchers described its cloaca in more detail and found similarities with the body outlet of birds.[49][50][51] In 2022, for the first time a belly button was found in a dinosaur fossil.[45][52] A physical life reconstruction of the animal was prepared by paleoartist Robert Nicholls.[53][54]

Edmontosaurus and Triceratops

Other originals include an Edmontosaurus annectens mummy (specimen SMF R 4036) from Lance Formation, Wyoming.[55][56][57] and two Triceratops skulls.[58][10] The museum bought the three specimen from fossil collector Charles Hazelius Sternberg and his sons in the early 20th century.[59][60] The museum also exhibits a cast of a complete Triceratops,[10] the museum's mascot.[61]

Casts

Big public attractions also include the casts of Tyrannosaurus rex[d] and Diplodocus longus (in front of the museum), an Iguanodon, the crested Hadrosaur Parasaurolophus and an Oviraptor.[40]

Further casts or single bones:[40]

Birds

A living reconstruction of the extinct dodo and many other stuffed birds are shown in a permanent exhibition in the upper level.[63] Additionally, the museum owns a large and diverse collection of birds with 90,000 bird skins, 5,050 egg sets, 17,000 skeletons, and 3,375 spirit specimens (a specimen preserved in fluid).[64][65] This is 75% of the known bird species, only a minor part is exhibited.[65]

Reptiles

The Anaconda exhibit is one of the oldest and most popular.[66] Since the remodeling finished in 2003, a new reptile exhibit addresses both the biodiversity of reptiles and amphibians and the topic of nature conservation.[67]

Messel research

The museum houses many originals from the nearby Messel pit,[68] Germany's first UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site,[69] among them a predecessor to the modern horse that lived about 50 million years ago and stood less than 60 cm (24 in) tall.[70][71][72] In 2015, researchers found a foal fetus in the body of the petrified primeval horse mare.[73][74][75] Also primates, crocodiles, bats, snakes, turtles and other fossils were found at Messel pit.[76]

Mammals

Display collections full of stuffed animals are arranged in the upper levels; among other things one can see one of twenty existing examples of the quagga, which has been extinct since 1883.[77][78]

The mammal collection focuses on bats, primates, rodents, and insectivores (not exhibited).[79]

Human evolution

Unique in Europe is a cast of the famous Lucy,[e] an almost complete skeleton of the upright, 1 m (3 ft 3 in) tall, hominid Australopithecus afarensis.[81] The exhibition also includes reconstructions of the heads of human ancestors.[81]

See also

Notes

  1. The museum was opened to the public on 22 November 1821.[16]
  2. Including buildings Alte Physik (south) and Jügelbau (north) by architect Peter Kulka.[26]
  3. Copy of a Tyrannosaurus located at the American Museum of Natural History in New York.[10]
  4. The original Lucy is stored in a safe at the National Museum of Ethiopia in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.[80]

References

Further reading

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