Extreme Mammals: The Biggest, Smallest, and Most Amazing Mammals of All Time
       
     
 Inspired by the language of comic books, the graphics for this show use bright panels of color, bold type and image treatments that highlight the extraordinary nature of the creatures interpreted within.
       
     
10_decks.jpg
       
     
Tasmanian_wolf_case.jpg
       
     
 For the Super Teeth interactive, illustrations of extinct and living mammal faces showing their teeth were printed onto a mirror and visitors could pose in front of them to see the teeth superimposed onto their own faces.  From top left:  Thyla
       
     
4 Heads-to-Tails 6.JPG
       
     
 This plant key accompanied a diorama depicting the Arctic environment during the Eocene epoch.
       
     
EM_Diorama.jpg
       
     
Extreme Mammals: The Biggest, Smallest, and Most Amazing Mammals of All Time
       
     
Extreme Mammals: The Biggest, Smallest, and Most Amazing Mammals of All Time

American Museum of Natural History, 2009

This exhibition highlights the incredible diversity of living and extinct mammals by exploring their evolution and the myriad adaptations that have developed along the way.  

 Inspired by the language of comic books, the graphics for this show use bright panels of color, bold type and image treatments that highlight the extraordinary nature of the creatures interpreted within.
       
     

Inspired by the language of comic books, the graphics for this show use bright panels of color, bold type and image treatments that highlight the extraordinary nature of the creatures interpreted within.

10_decks.jpg
       
     
Tasmanian_wolf_case.jpg
       
     
 For the Super Teeth interactive, illustrations of extinct and living mammal faces showing their teeth were printed onto a mirror and visitors could pose in front of them to see the teeth superimposed onto their own faces.  From top left:  Thyla
       
     

For the Super Teeth interactive, illustrations of extinct and living mammal faces showing their teeth were printed onto a mirror and visitors could pose in front of them to see the teeth superimposed onto their own faces.

From top left: Thylacoleo, hippopotamus, capybara, opossum, horse, sabertooth tiger, mammoth

4 Heads-to-Tails 6.JPG
       
     
 This plant key accompanied a diorama depicting the Arctic environment during the Eocene epoch.
       
     

This plant key accompanied a diorama depicting the Arctic environment during the Eocene epoch.

EM_Diorama.jpg