Gallery of Evolution
The Gallery of Evolution houses the National Museum of Natural History's most impressive collection in an 1889 iron and glass hall.
About Gallery of Evolution
The Gallery of Evolution houses the National Museum of Natural History's most impressive collection in an 1889 iron and glass hall. The central nave features a massive parade of taxidermied animals arranged as if migrating across the African savanna. Elephants, giraffes, zebras, and rhinos are frozen mid-stride under soaring windows that flood the space with natural light. The upper galleries display extinct species, including dodo birds and Tasmanian tigers, alongside specimens showing evolutionary adaptation.
You enter on the ground floor facing the animal procession, then spiral upward through three levels via the perimeter walkways. The second floor focuses on marine life with whale skeletons suspended overhead, while the third level houses the endangered species room. This is a sobering but beautifully presented space. The Galerie des Enfants occupies the entire first floor with hands-on exhibits about ecosystems, though it feels somewhat disconnected from the main attraction.
Most visitors spend too much time photographing the ground floor spectacle and rush through the upper levels, but the third floor's climate change exhibits are actually more thought-provoking than the animal parade below. The audio guide is decent but unnecessary - the displays are well-labeled in French and English. Skip the basement temporary exhibitions unless they specifically interest you; the permanent collection is the real draw here.
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