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Kids get a sense of Sauropod size with a glimpse at a huge fossil replica femur.

Press Center

The World’s Largest Dinosaurs, an exciting exhibition about super-sized Sauropods, opens May 26 at the California Academy of Sciences

New exhibit delves into the biology and behavior of the largest dinosaurs to ever walk earth.

SAN FRANCISCO, CA (April 13, 2023)— The World’s Largest Dinosaurs, a major exhibition on view at the California Academy of Sciences from May 26, 2023 to January 21, 2024, explores the amazing biology of a group of uniquely super-sized dinosaurs: the long-necked and long-tailed sauropods. Through imaginative exhibits—including the exhibition centerpiece, a life-size, detailed model of a 60-foot-long MamenchisaurusThe World’s Largest Dinosaurs takes visitors deeper than just bones into the bodies of these titans, shedding light on how heart rate, respiration, metabolism, and reproduction are linked to size.

"As a paleontologist, I'm thrilled that the Academy has this opportunity to share the latest insights about the biggest dinosaurs ever to walk the Earth. The World's Largest Dinosaurs exhibition goes well beyond fossilized bones and teeth to explore these ancient giants as living, breathing creatures," said Academy Executive Director Scott Sampson, PhD, also known as Dr. Scott on the hit PBS children's show Dinosaur Train. "From explorations of the pressure needed to pump blood all the way up those crazy-long necks, to understanding how much food was needed to maintain such incredible bulks, awed visitors will come away with a better understanding of how these super-sized beasts lived and thrived."

Organized by the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) in New York, the exhibition draws on paleo-biological research that looks in part to living organisms to make inferences about how these giants—some of which grew to be longer than 150 feet, or the length of four standard city buses—were able to thrive, as a group, for approximately 140 million years.

Distinguished by their colossal size, sauropods included animals of diverse shape and ornamentation, such as the gigantic Apatosaurus, formerly known as Brontosaurus. Focusing on the biology and behavior of these diverse creatures, The World’s Largest Dinosaurs builds on a growing body of research that examines dinosaurs as living animals, primarily through comparisons with modern dinosaur relatives.

The exhibition is curated by Mark Norell, Curator Emeritus of the American Museum of Natural History’s Division of Paleontology, who has done groundbreaking work in the field of dinosaur biology, and features the work of exhibition guest co-curator Martin Sander from the University of Bonn in Germany. Sander has assembled a multi-disciplinary research team of experts in materials science, animal nutrition, sports medicine, biomechanics, and paleontology to address the intriguing question of what sauropods in particular were like as living animals and how they became so large.

In their research, both Norell and Sander look to the closest modern relatives of dinosaurs, such as birds and crocodiles, to make inferences about sauropod biology, and the exhibition includes an array of interactive exhibits and hands-on activities that offer visitors of all ages engaging opportunities to compare sauropods with living animals. For instance, visitors can compare sauropod teeth with those of modern plant-eaters and carnivores or use a hand pump to discover how much pressure would have been needed to distribute blood through a sauropod’s long neck to its head.

“This exhibition represents a new era of dinosaur research that leverages recent advances in technology and the expertise of multiple scientific disciplines to understand how the largest animals to ever roam the earth actually lived,” said curator Norell. “It demonstrates how our understanding of these enormous creatures continually evolves and changes in response to new science.”

“The question of sauropod biology, particularly their gigantic size and incredible longevity as a group has interested me for some time,” said Sander, guest co-curator. “This exhibition addresses this question through a multi-disciplinary research process that reconstructs the mysteries of sauropod life in vivid detail.”

Exhibition Sections

Upon entering the exhibit, visitors will be greeted by the enormous head of an Argentinosaurus, considered the world’s largest sauropod, measuring up to 140 feet long and likely weighing up to 90 tons. From there, guests will explore the multidimensional creatures through a variety of lenses in multiple content sections:

Photos of the exhibit are available for press use. Journalists interested in attending a press preview on Wednesday, May 24 at 9am can request a pass by emailing jpeach@calacademy.org.

The World's Largest Dinosaurs exhibit is generously supported by The Bernard Osher Foundation.