Florida Museum of Natural History.
Museum of natural history | Butterfly Rainforest

 
 
 

I am a history buff, that helped me get through high school, I guess because I am an Eastern Woodland Americas Native (Native American) and grew up at the feet of our elders ,now ancestors, at every meeting that I was allowed to attend.

I now find that most people are not as excited as I am with a Museum, or do not have one close to them, so I am making this site in order to encourage you to get out and find one in your area.

 

 

 

112.jpg

 

 

I must travel 99 miles from my driveway to the parking lot at the Gainesville V.A. for visits with my eye and heart doctors, so at times when I get out of the hospital and it is open, I enjoy a short side trip to this Museum.

 

 

 

 

museum13.jpg

 

The ancestors of the state of Florida must have also be of a Matriarch society

just like the true traditional New England American natives.

Women rule men ?????

 

 

 
 
 
 
You must come to my Museum!
 

Mr. Anolis said, “you think that your ancestors are old, you need to come see some of mine"!

Anolis carolinensis - Green Anole and  Anolis sagrei sagrei - Cuban Brown Anole are all over our central Florida and I wouldn’t have it any other way however, their ancestors were all over this planet at one time.

 

 

 
 

111museum.jpg

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

museam19.jpg

 

 

I think Donna took this picture because

she wanted to get both old fossils together?

 

 

 

 

 
Facts about Fossils in Florida, Photos, and other Prehistoric Fun!
 
 
The Prehistoric Giant Woolly Mammoth Elephant was 9ft.(2.75M) tall, and had long shaggy hair in two layers. It had thick fur and long guard hairs, similar to that of musk oxen. It was also called the “Tundra Mammoth”. This prehistoric elephant lived between 1.8 Million Years ago and went extinct about 10 Thousand years ago.
 
 
 
 

museam008.jpg

 
 
 
Rare shark of the deep snapped
 

A species of shark rarely seen alive because its natural habitat is 600 metres or more under the sea was captured on film by staff at a Japanese marine park this week.

The Awashima Marine Park, south of Tokyo, was alerted by a fisherman at a nearby port on Sunday that he had spotted an odd-looking eel-like creature with a mouthful of needle-sharp teeth.

Marine park staff caught the 1.6-metre-long creature, which they identified as a female frilled shark, sometimes referred to as a "living fossil" because it is a primitive species that has changed little since prehistoric times.

 
 

However, it is not ever close to the size of its ancestors.

 
 

museam18.jpg

 
 
This is a free Earthlink site so I am limited as to
the number of pictures and their size, sorry.
 
 
museum9.jpg

1museum.jpg

museum5.jpg

Drop me a line
mailme.gif
At

 

walkingfox@earthlink.net
                 or
 
 
eXTReMe Tracker