Hopi artist Emil Pooley carved the Kachinas on display, and his children decorated them with bold and bright colors, feathers, and with natural objects in their hands.
This exhibit case illustrates the great diversity of bivalves that existed here during the Early Cretaceous (around 95 to 110 million years ago) and their living relatives.
The Aviation Collection includes uniforms, instruments, and pictures, plus a half-scale model of a “Curtiss JN-4 Can” biplane, or “Jenny” as it was affectionately known.
The Museum's Noble Planetarium was the first planetarium to be named after a female astronomer, Charlie Mary Noble, a Fort Worth educator of math and astronomy.