Exhibit Route
Estimated visit time: 5–8 minutes
- Read the curator note.
- Study the featured object records.
- Answer the visitor questions.
- Continue to a related learning path.
Curator Note
Movement leaves structure behind. Limbs, joints, vertebrae, wings, paws, hooves, and claws all show how animals solve mechanical problems through anatomy. This exhibit introduces bones as evidence of motion. Rather than presenting skeletons as static objects, it looks at how skeletal structures support walking, running, climbing, flying, and weight-bearing.
01
Structure and Motion
Bones are often displayed as still objects, but they are shaped by movement. A joint surface suggests a range of motion. A long limb bone suggests leverage. A fused or shortened element may indicate specialization.
02
Forelimbs and Function
Forelimbs can support grasping, running, digging, climbing, swimming, or flight. They become more understandable when compared across animals.
03
Wings as Modified Forelimbs
A wing, a forelimb, and a hoof are not isolated examples. They are variations on structural themes.
04
Teaching Motion Through Comparison
In a teaching collection, movement can be reconstructed through comparison. Similar structures can perform different functions when modified by different movement demands.
Featured Objects
Key Questions
- How do bones support movement?
- What does limb structure reveal about behavior?
You completed this exhibit
You practiced careful museum-style observation and interpretation.
- Comparing object features
- Reading anatomical form cautiously
- Connecting form with function
- Avoiding over-interpretation