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Special Exhibitions
The Great Hall
The Invisible Art:
The Yale Peabody Museum Dioramas
Online Exhibitions
Permanent Halls
Floor Plans
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The Great Hall
at the Yale Peabody Museum
The Great Hall of Dinosaurs is the centerpiece of the Yale Peabody Museum. Featuring skeletons from the Museum’s world-renowned paleontology collections, it is also home to Rudolph Zallinger’s famous mural The Age of Reptiles.
Opened in 1926, the Great Hall was designed to house some of the extensive fossils collected in the late 19th century for O.C. Marsh, among them the Peabodys largest mounted skeleton, a juvenile Apatosaurus. Nearby are the reconstructed skeletons of Camarasaurus, Stegosaurus and Camptosaurus.
Also on display in the Great Hall:

Petrified Wood:
Rainbows in Stone
Other fossils in the Great Hall include:
- Skeletons and a model of the carnivorous dinosaur Deinonychus
- Archelon, the largest species of turtle ever known
- Skeletons of the toothed birds Hesperornis and Icthyornis
- A composite slab of fossil dinosaur footprints from Connecticut
- A fossil crinoid, the “sea lily” Seirocrinus
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