La Brea Tar Pits - Where Dinosaurs Once Roamed
If you love archeology, be sure to check out the La Brea Tar Pits on your next trip to L.
A.
More Ice Age plants and animals have been recovered here than anywhere else on earth.
It's hard to imagine but here, just a few blocks south from glitzy Beverly Hills, there were once such animals as saber-toothed cats and mammoths roaming the area.
Inside the museum you'll see reconstructions of the varou skeletons whilc, nearby, Hancock Park hsa pathways you can stroll to the various dig sites.
The fossils collected at La Brea date back to between 10,000 and 40,000 years ago.
Nearly all of the skeletons on display in the museum are real fossil bones found at the tar pits.
Since 1906, more than one million bones have been recovered from the La Brea Tar Pits representing 231 species of vertebrates.
Another 159 kinds of plants and 234 kinds of invertebrates have been identified.
The large number of fossils resulted when the sticky asphalt entrapped many Ice Age animals.
Interestingly, such entrapment is ongoing today -- mostly birds, rodents and rabbits.
A fence surrounds the pits to prevent visitors from spending more time at the site than they had planned.
Dire wolves are the most common large mammals found at La Brea -- in fact, several thousand have been found.
Altogether, more than 2,000 saber-toothed cats have been excavated.
To help visitors envision these ancient and extinct creatures being trapped in the pits, the museum has life-size replicas of mammoths and other animals positioned in and around the tar pits.
As you walk along the park trails, you'll also come across several ongoing excavation sites and, during certain periods, be able to watch as bones are taken from the ground, cleaned and catalogued.
For more information on the La Brea Tar Pits, phone (323) 934-PAGE or visit tarpits.
org.
Entrance to the museum is $7, although there is no admission charge for Hancock Park.
The La Brea Tar Pits are conveniently located for visitors to Los Angeles and are an easy freeway offramp from Interstate 10 between downtown Los Angeles and Santa Monica.
There are many other fascinating places to visit near the tar pits, including Marina del Rey, Santa Monica and Hollywood.
The La Brea Tar Pits can be visited within a couple of hours, so plan to visit nearby attractions on the same day.
A.
More Ice Age plants and animals have been recovered here than anywhere else on earth.
It's hard to imagine but here, just a few blocks south from glitzy Beverly Hills, there were once such animals as saber-toothed cats and mammoths roaming the area.
Inside the museum you'll see reconstructions of the varou skeletons whilc, nearby, Hancock Park hsa pathways you can stroll to the various dig sites.
The fossils collected at La Brea date back to between 10,000 and 40,000 years ago.
Nearly all of the skeletons on display in the museum are real fossil bones found at the tar pits.
Since 1906, more than one million bones have been recovered from the La Brea Tar Pits representing 231 species of vertebrates.
Another 159 kinds of plants and 234 kinds of invertebrates have been identified.
The large number of fossils resulted when the sticky asphalt entrapped many Ice Age animals.
Interestingly, such entrapment is ongoing today -- mostly birds, rodents and rabbits.
A fence surrounds the pits to prevent visitors from spending more time at the site than they had planned.
Dire wolves are the most common large mammals found at La Brea -- in fact, several thousand have been found.
Altogether, more than 2,000 saber-toothed cats have been excavated.
To help visitors envision these ancient and extinct creatures being trapped in the pits, the museum has life-size replicas of mammoths and other animals positioned in and around the tar pits.
As you walk along the park trails, you'll also come across several ongoing excavation sites and, during certain periods, be able to watch as bones are taken from the ground, cleaned and catalogued.
For more information on the La Brea Tar Pits, phone (323) 934-PAGE or visit tarpits.
org.
Entrance to the museum is $7, although there is no admission charge for Hancock Park.
The La Brea Tar Pits are conveniently located for visitors to Los Angeles and are an easy freeway offramp from Interstate 10 between downtown Los Angeles and Santa Monica.
There are many other fascinating places to visit near the tar pits, including Marina del Rey, Santa Monica and Hollywood.
The La Brea Tar Pits can be visited within a couple of hours, so plan to visit nearby attractions on the same day.
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