[2] In the halls of the Palace of Culture and Science in Warsaw, professor Zofia Kielan-Jaworowska organised an exhibition named "Dinosaurs of the Gobi Desert" in 1968.
The public was first given access to the "Evolution on Land" permanent exhibition in 1985, which was created by Zofia Kielan-Jaworowska with support from Andrzej Sulimski and a group from the Institute of Paleobiology.
The gigantic skeletal replica of the enormous plant-eating sauropod dinosaur Opisthocoelicaudia fills practically the whole main exhibition hall at the Museum of Evolution.
[5] A group of young scientists led by professor Jerzy Dzik made some of Poland's main palaeontological discoveries in Krasiejów, close to Opole, where they uncovered a cemetery of Late Triassic reptiles and amphibians in 1993.
The Museum also has other Polish fossils on exhibit, including the oldest frog skeleton ever discovered, which was revealed in Triassic rocks from the area of Cracow.
[7] The casts of pterosaurs and early birds from the renowned German Jurassic Solnhofen limestone, which are some of the best fossil specimens confirming Darwin's theory of evolution, are among the other displays.
The Mammal Evolution Hall has a realistic reconstruction of the Australopithecus 'Lucy,' which was made by sculptor Marta Szubert under the direction of Karol Sabath, a Polish evolutionary popularizer.