Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (1) Seattle plesiosaur
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (2) in the paleo lab with a proto-mammal the staff is working on after finding the fossil, Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (3) Seattle
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (4) amphibian from Antarctica, now in Seattle
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (5) during much of time, Washington was under the ocean. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (6) gorgonopsid proto-mammal. see fossil in nearby photo. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (7) lystrosaurus were proto-mammals and were found throughout the southern hemisphere, leading to evidence for the movement of continents. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (9) early proto-mammals. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (11) Seattle a few thousand years ago. we still have the martens and are re-stocking them from Canada to help the species. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (12) the ground sloth at the Burke was found when expansion was done on the Seattle-Tacoma Airport.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (13) our ground sloth found at the Sea-Tac airport
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (14) Washington not long ago. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM , video exhibit shows the advance and retreat of the ice sheet glaciers over Puget Sound and Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (16) more and more larger early mammals are being found. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (18) only one dinosaur has ever been found in Washington, right next to the Canadian border, because we were under the ocean. lots of marine reptiles, though. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (19) early whales in Washington. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (20) early primate. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (22) an early primate of the Pacific Northwest jumps from tree to tree. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (23) hoplophoneus was related to cats and lived in Washington. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM paleosyops was related to tapirs and lived in the Pacific Northwest. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (27) the Pacific Northwest has a very full record of the ages of prehistoric mammals. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (28)oreodonts were very common mid-size mammals living in herds and hervivores. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (29) camels and zebras in Washington. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (30) lots of squirrel species over the millions of years. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (31) related to aplodontias of today, living right here in Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (32) a land beaver of this region. dug corkscrew burrows. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (33) kolponomos was a bear relative that lived like a sea otter; it was first found near Port Townsend, Washington and we've seen the original fossils there. Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (35) Bruce and a very large marine reptile in Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (38). Seattle.
Aleksander & Milam: Burke Museum 2019 DM (41) several octopi for Michael in the Burke. Seattle.