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Bruce Presents: Alaskan Dinosaurs: New Discoveries from an Ancient Arctic Ecosystem

Each year, hundreds of bird species migrate to the Arctic to nest and raise their young, benefitting from seasonally abundant food resources and up to six months of continuous summer daylight. They are essential members of their ecosystems, aiding in crucial tasks like pollination and seed dispersal and insect and small mammal population control. But work by paleontologists at the University of Alaska Fairbanks has made the surprising revelation that this behavior isn’t new- birds and non-avian dinosaurs have been…

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March 13, 2025 @ 6:00 pm - 7:45 pm

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1 Museum Drive
Greenwich, CT 06830-7157 United States

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Bruce Museum

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Each year, hundreds of bird species migrate to the Arctic to nest and raise their young, benefitting from seasonally abundant food resources and up to six months of continuous summer daylight. They are essential members of their ecosystems, aiding in crucial tasks like pollination and seed dispersal and insect and small mammal population control. But work by paleontologists at the University of Alaska Fairbanks has made the surprising revelation that this behavior isn’t new- birds and non-avian dinosaurs have been nesting in Alaska for nearly 73 million years! Fossils from Alaska’s North Slope represent one of the best collections of baby dinosaur material in the world and research has revealed that they wouldn’t be old enough to migrate to lower latitudes before winter, so they endured months of frigid temperatures, snowfall, and continuous winter darkness. The birds and their hatchlings may have been able to fly in time, but it still would have been no easy feat to migrate to more equable conditions mere months after hatching. And just as it wouldn’t have been easy to be a dinosaur or bird living in this Cretaceous ecosystem, it isn’t easy for us to collect their fossils either! In the summer, we are faced with cold and rainy days, mud, and mosquitoes. In the winter, we deal with deep snow, temperatures down to -50 degrees Fahrenheit, and limited daylight. It’s worth it though, as polar dinosaur fossils are some of the rarest on the planet and are challenging our perception of dinosaur physiology and behavior by providing new and exciting insights into ancient Arctic ecosystems.

Join us for an event reception at 6-6:30 pm.

Support for Bruce Presents is generously provided by Berkley One, a Berkley Company.

Space is limited. Online registration required.

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Kenji Nakahashi: Strange Beauty

Best known for his conceptual and street photography, Kenji Nakahashi (Japanese, 1947–2017) produced a highly experimental body of work grounded in the everyday. Image: Kenji Nakahashi (Japanese, 1947–2017) Time–B, 1980 (printed 1985) Gelatin silver print, 11 x 14 in. Bruce Museum, Anonymous gift in memory of Kenji Nakahashi, 2022.01.33 © Center for Creative Photography, Arizona Board of Regents

Bruce Museum

Blanche Lazzell: Becoming an American Modernist

The first monographic exhibition of her work in nearly two decades, Blanche Lazzell: Becoming an American Modernist traces the artist’s pioneering approaches to abstraction in the United States. Image: Blanche Lazzell (American, 1878–1956) Church Around the Corner, 1949 Oil on canvas, 28 x 36 3/16 in. Art Museum of West Virginia University Collection, acquired through Frances Sellers © Estate of Blanche Lazzell

Bruce Museum

All In This Together: Highlights from our Printmaking Programs

All In This Together: Highlights from our Printmaking Programs Exhibition Dates: March 4-30, 2025 Over the past 12 months, the Center for Contemporary Printmaking has facilitated the printmaking projects of dozens of artists. We’ve hosted Artists-in-Residence, conducted collaboration and editioning services, offered workshops across a spectrum of printmaking processes, and mentored high school students through our Grace Ross Shanley Fellowship Program. Our March 2025 Exhibition highlights some of the prints that have been produced at CCP through our suite of…

Center for Contemporary Printmaking

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