Race to the End of the Earth recounts one of the most stirring tales of Antarctic exploration—the contest to reach the South Pole in 1911-1912–and focuses on the challenges that the two team leaders, Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen and British Royal Navy Captain Robert Falcon Scott, confronted as they undertook their journeys to the Pole and back. Now Open
Lizards & Snakes: Alive! features more than 60 live lizards and snakes in re-created habitats, introducing visitors to a diversity of legged and legless creatures and their remarkable adaptations. Now Open.
Hubble Narrated by Leonardo DiCaprio, This awe-inspiring film from the award-winning IMAX Space Team allows audiences to blast off alongside the Atlantis STS-125 crew, witness some of the most challenging spacewalks ever performed, and experience firsthand Hubble’s striking images. Now Open.
Journey to the Stars In this all-new Space Show narrated by Whoopi Goldberg, travel 13 billion years into the past, when the first stars were born. Visit the heart of our fiery Sun, and glimpse its eventual demise some five billion years in the future. Now Playing.
Space Show Double Feature Part of the year-long celebration commemorating the 10th anniversary of the opening of the Frederick Phineas and Sandra Priest Rose Center for Earth and Space, this double feature will include the Museum’s first two Space Shows: Passport to the Universe (narrated by Tom Hanks) and The Search for Life: Are We Alone? (narrated by Harrison Ford). Now Playing.
Spider Silk See a spectacular and extremely rare textile, woven from golden-colored silk thread produced by more than one million spiders in Madagascar. Now Open.
On Feathered Wings: Birds in Flight Four renowned wildlife photographers present striking photographs of birds as we rarely see them: up close in flight.
Now Open.
New Diamonds A new display of 25 dazzling diamonds are now on view at the Museum's Morgan Memorial Hall of Gems. Now Open.
Highway of An Empire: The Great Inca Road An exhibition of more than 50 striking photographs featuring the 25,000 miles of roads and trails that the Incas built six centuries ago in South America. Now Open.