

It was the biggest snake that ever lived. Titanoboa: Monster Snake is a collaboration of the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, the Florida Museum of Natural History, the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, and the Smithsonian Channel.A file image of a 3D illustration of the Titanoboa. 26, “Anaconda” will be the feature presentation at the Academy’s popular Mega-Bad Movie Night. live animal show that weekend is “Snakes Alive!,” which showcases some of the museum’s live snakes, plus close-ups on a giant screen. 14 and 15, coincides with the Academy’s annual Paleopalooza festival, which features a variety of fun family activities, fossil displays, films, talks, and the chance to meet Academy paleontologists. There is a $3 fee to enter Titanoboa: Monster Snake in addition to regular museum admission. Learn about the important role snakes play in our lives.See snake specimens from the Academy’s Herpetology Collection.Enjoy a Smithsonian documentary about Titanoboa in the mini-theater (every hour on the hour).Learn about venom, fangs and scales from the educators at the Carts of Curiosity.See live snakes from the Academy’s collection.There also is a shorter crawl-through tunnel for young children. Crawl the length of Titanoboa in the Titanoboa Challenge.Examine model vertebrae to compare Titanoboa with a modern anaconda.Stand eye-to-eye with a full-scale model of this massive predator.


Titanoboa: Monster Snake, on view through Sunday, April 19, delves into the stories of the discovery, reconstruction and implications of this enormous reptile. “The exhibit opens on Valentine’s Day, so be sure to bring your main squeeze!” “Titanoboa is a bigger, badder boa, and it will simply knock your socks off,” says Academy Director of Exhibits Jennifer Sontchi. Twice as long as the longest snake alive today, Titanoboa could crush and devour a crocodile.įossil plants and animals found at the site reveal that Titanoboa roamed the earliest known rain forest, teeming with life and dating to the Paleocene, the lost world that followed the demise of the dinosaurs. Measuring 48 feet long and weighing 2,500 pounds, this massive predator grew as long as a school bus and weighed as much as a small car. 14.įrom deep underground in a Colombian coal mine, in a layer dating to 65 million years ago, scientists have uncovered remains of the largest snake that ever roamed the planet, Titanoboa cerrejonensis. Slithering in at 48 feet long and weighing an estimated one-and-a-half tons, the world’s largest snake-a realistic replica of it, that is-will be on exhibit at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University starting Saturday, Feb. 15, 2014 and features a replica of the biggest snake that ever lived.
