Established | 1908 |
---|---|
Location | Valley Life Sciences Building, UC Berkeley |
Coordinates | 37°52′16″N 122°15′43″W / 37.87111°N 122.26194°W |
Type | Science museum |
Collection size | 640,000+ specimens |
Visitors | Research only |
Director | Michael Nachman |
Curator | Rauri Bowie (Birds), Jimmy A McGuire (Herpetology), Eileen Lacey (Mammals) |
Website | Official Website |
The Museum of Vertebrate Zoology is a natural history museum at the University of California, Berkeley. The museum was founded by philanthropist Annie Montague Alexander in 1908. Alexander recommended zoologist Joseph Grinnell as museum director, a position he held until his death in 1939.[1]
The museum became a center of authority for the study of vertebrate biology and evolution on the West Coast, comparable to other major natural history museums in the United States.[1]
It has one of the nation's largest research collections of mammals, birds, amphibians and reptiles, and the largest collection of any university museum.[2] [3] The museum is located on the UC Berkeley campus, in the Valley Life Sciences Building, on the 3rd floor, entrance at room 3101.
Footnotes
External links
- Official website
- Media related to Museum of Vertebrate Zoology at Wikimedia Commons
- UC Berkeley Interactive Map - Museum is in Valley Life Sciences Building (3rd floor)