Museo de Historia Natural Rio Seco

This was a small museum with local specimens. Interestingly they prepared birds in a unique way, with feathers still attached to wings. If that’s not your thing, here’s your warning it starts and will continue down a weird path.

Here’s a flamingo.

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A vulture.

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Probably an albatross.

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Here’s a seal jaw with teeth and you can see the extra spikes they have to help hold onto fish they catch.

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Penguins look cute even as skeletons, but there are a bunch more coming later that were much more alive that these ones.

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Lots of dolphins and whales get washed up in this area, so they have lots of skulls.

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There are also many other local birds that they’ve posed in the rafters.

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Some of them more in flight.

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The local parrots also look unique in this preparation style.

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Full skeletons take a lot more work to prepare, but they have some great preparations. Here’s a dolphin as whales have baleen, not teeth.

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A majestic owl where you can see the full flight feathers splayed out.

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It was a really cool experience seeing such a different presentation compared to what we normally see in natural history museums.

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Another little dolphin.

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Another vulture

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Armadillo scales will preserve, and you can see all the hairs as well.

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They do have a really large whale skeleton. It was a Sei whale, one of the third largest whales.

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Being in a small place meant that you could get right up to the skeleton and right inside it essentially.

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Here’s Matthew for scale next. His head would fit in the eye socket.

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Here’s Kerri for scale next to a condor.

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2 Responses to Museo de Historia Natural Rio Seco

  1. That’s a very cool museum. It makes a kind of sense for feathers to be mounted next to the skeleton. The parrot, dolphins, and whale are especially interesting.