North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences

The newest facility, the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences at Greenville, was announced in 2020 and opened to the public on September 18, 2021.

[3][4][5] The North Carolina State Museum was created in 1879 by combining two existing state-owned collections of geologic and agricultural specimens.

[4] The museum's collections, outreach and education programs, and status grew over the next 60 years under the stewardship of Herbert Brimley.

[10] In 2020, the museum announced its acquisition of the Dueling Dinosaurs, a well-preserved and scientifically important specimen from Montana of a Triceratops and Tyrannosaurus possibly locked in combat.

First found in 2006, there were unsuccessful attempts to sell it to museums or private collectors for over a decade until the NCMNS reached out in 2016, prompting negotiations to purchase the fossil.

Following the construction of a dedicated display wing in the Nature Research Center, the Dueling Dinosaurs exhibit was officially opened to the public in 2024 in the newly-built SECU DinoLab.

The museum also makes use of distance learning to broadcast lessons and virtual field trips to classrooms around the state.

It includes Piedmont prairie, forest, ponds, a stream, and sustainable building features integrated with a wildlife-friendly landscape.

[40] Prairie Ridge is part of the museum's mission of enhancing public understanding and appreciation of the natural environment by providing an outdoor learning space while acting as a model for renewable and sustainable energy.

[42] Displays and interactive exhibits include an outdoor Tree Trail and Fossil Dig Pit, and the museum offers educational program experiences and special events.

Former logo, featuring the sperm whale "Trouble"
Whale skeletons over the "Coastal North Carolina" hall.
The "Carolina Emperor" emerald , the largest cut emerald known from North America
Eremotherium fossil in "Prehistoric North Carolina" hall.
Acrocanthosaurus skeleton in the "Terror of the South" exhibit
The "Daily Planet" globe is a 3-storey multimedia theater on the museum interior
Nature Research Center