The Magazine of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County October and November 2017 AN EXHIBITION OPENS

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The Magazine of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County October and November 2017 AN EXHIBITION OPENS

The Magazine of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County October and November 2017 A New Chapter FREE for members Explore 5,000 years of history, culture, and art connected by ink in this West Coast premiere. AN EXHIBITION NOV 19 APR 15 MEMBER PREVIEW DAYS Thursday, November 16 Saturday, November 18 PUBLIC OPENING Sunday, November 19 VIP RECEPTION Wednesday, November 15 RSVP by calling 213.763.3499 or visit NHM.ORG/tattoo. Share your tattoo story using #tattoonhmla Our President and Director, Dr. Lori Bettison-Varga, has lent this space so I could share my thoughts as I shift into a new role at the Natural History Family of Museums. I m transitioning from President of the Board of Trustees, a position I ve held since 2012, to Board Chair. As I reflect on the past five years, I am proud of making the museum sites more dynamic physically, with new outdoor engagement and indoor exhibits, as well as strengthening our public-private partnership with the County of L.A. I believe that much of the enthusiasm surrounding the museums has to do with Lori s leadership. She has monumental energy and an openness to new ideas, which will guide us into an incredibly exciting future. Her focus on inclusiveness and engagement for the staff, the Board, our community, and our visitors is crucial for us. She also has a PhD in geology, and that scientific training allows her to be a different kind of leader. Perhaps most of all, I am excited by our strategic direction and our goal to become a museum of, for, and with L.A. Shannon Faulk, the talented new Board President, is the right leader for this phase of our evolution. He is respected in the community and has a vision for what the museums can be destinations in and of themselves and also a force for knowledge and inspiration outside of their walls. It feels powerful to be involved in an institution that has so much impact, a rare and special place where kids and adults want to be. We all have a big task ahead of us to be the place that inspires wonder, discovery, and responsibility for our natural and cultural worlds in the hearts and minds of millions of people who are interested in Los Angeles. I can t wait for what lies ahead. Sincerely, Sarah Meeker Jensen Chairperson of the Board of Trustees 2 Briefs 4 Tattoo: A Special Exhibition Opens 6 Tattoo: A SoCal Story Digging Up Dinosaurs 8 12 13 15 16 Events Institutional Partner How to Train Your Rat(s) Miguel and the Mountain Lion Meet Our New President of the Board The Naturalist magazine is a publication of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County and is issued four times a year. As a Member benefit, each issue provides a look at Museum exhibits, collections, adventures, research, and events. Through them, we inspire wonder, discovery, and responsibility for our natural and cultural worlds. AN EXHIBITION OPENS Cover images courtesy of the Musée du quai Branly Jacques Chirac in Paris. Images clockwise from upper right: Thomas Duval; Michel Urtado/photo courtesy of Thierry Olivier; Claude Germain; Don Ed Hardy. Center image by Cedric Arnold/ Courtesy of Galerie Olivier Waltman. 1 This exhibition was developed and produced by the Musée du quai Branly Jacques Chirac in Paris.

Natural History Family of Museums PALEO PLAY ZONE Image Deniz Durmus There s something new to see in the Discovery Center the Paleo Play Zone! Right inside the doors, you can start digging in a fossil pit like a junior paleontologist. Nearby, we ve laid out a tabletop dinosaur puzzle so you can put all the paleo pieces together. When you re done with your dinosaur dig, there are sparkly minerals to touch. And microscopes and magnifying glasses allow you to investigate everything in the Discover Center up close. The Discovery Center is on Level 2 of the Museum. Look for the giant polar bear out front! Image: Deniz Durmus It s Spider Time! La Brea Tar Pits and Museum Youngest Fossils Since 2008, the museum has been hard at work on Project 23, an aboveground excavation of fossils discovered during nearby construction. For almost 10 years, Project 23 has given visitors a unique look at La Brea s fossil deposits and the chance to see excavators working on site. Now, a brand-new box of William S. Hart Museum Art at the Hart Get ready to release your inner art critic at this year s William S. Hart Museum open house. Learn all about the art and artistry of both painting and sculpture while viewing the Hart collection of Western art. Get tips for appreciating the many works of art in the collection, including what to look for when viewing a piece, Open through Sunday, November 26 Project 23 Box 13 is officially open! and learn how each one tells a story. OUR NEW STATE DINOSAUR IS HERE! In the Spider Pavilion, every day of the week, visitors are getting up close to eight-legged wonders. Box 13 contains the youngest fossils from Project 23, at roughly 30,000 years old. The fossils from Box 13 And after playing an artwork bingo game, you can try some of the techniques used in pieces from the It s news that s been 66 million years in the Assemblymember Richard Bloom of Santa When visitors explore the open-air will become part of a larger research collection, including watercolor, making: California has an official state dinosaur! Monica introduced the bill that designated this habitat, they ll discover dozens of project on ancient food webs and illustrated letter writing, live model With the stroke of Governor Jerry Brown s pen, duck-billed herbivore the official state dinosaur, species including the returning will help scientists understand sketching, and wax figures. Discover Augustynolophus morrisi joins the ranks of California thanks in part to the guidance of NHMLA Dinosaur stars: orb weavers that can create Southern California s ancient eco- some of the common features in emblems such as the California grizzly bear, Institute Director Luis Chiappe, who nominated six-foot-wide webs. Pavilion goers system. Researchers will examine paintings by one of Hart s favorites, California poppy, and California quail. Augustynolophus for the honor. will also pick up spider facts from the remains of small mammals and Charles M. Russell, and help analyze This unique dinosaur has some impressive our Gallery Interpreters and learn plants, which are excellent indicators a painting to figure out if it s an 2 California credentials. Augustynolophus is only found in California, and it s also the most complete a little bit more about how these remarkable web engineers are of environmental conditions. Guests will be able to watch excavators extract authentic Russell, or gasp! a forgery. 3 dinosaur (of any species) ever found in the state. There are only two known fossil specimens of Augustynolophus in the world, and they both reside here at NHMLA. Find this Cretaceous herbivore, nicknamed Auggie, in the Dinosaur Hall. Illustration: Stephanie Abramowicz spinning their days. Free for Members Visit NHM.ORG/spiders for more information. Spider Pavilion sponsored by Western Exterminator. Image Deniz Durmas fossils from this new box outside in the park area, and then head inside the La Brea Tar Pits Museum to the Fossil Lab, where they can see paleontological preparators cleaning and sorting the brand-new material. Visit TARPITS.ORG/calendar for more information. Explore art at the William S. Hart Museum open house Sunday, November 19 11 am to 4 pm Visit HARTMUSEUM.ORG for more information.

A SPECIAL EXHIBITION OPENS EVERY TATTOO HAS A STORY. What s yours? Share them with us on Instagram using the hashtag #tattoonhmla. When visitors walk into Tattoo, NHMLA s new special exhibition, they will experience the indelible power of this practice, which is at once ancient and contemporary. Tattoo, which makes its West Coast debut on Sunday, November 19, opens the door to an exploration of 5,000 years of history, culture, and art connected by ink, while also spotlighting the colorful tattoo scene in The Museum s collection will be out front as well, with examples of the history and culture of tattooing in Southern California, including material from local artists, collectors, and community members. Mark your calendar, because this Tattoo is temporary. Here s a preview of this extraordinary world. One look at the tattoos on the lifelike silicone body forms in the introductory group. Tattooing can be a rite of passage for a young person moving into adulthood; it can also be a badge of pride, a way to defy authority, or a mark put on someone else s body without his or her consent. This section includes selections of photos, figurines, and textiles from NHMLA s collection and an interactive component where museumgoers with tattoos are invited to share their own of traditional style and the exchange of ideas and techniques among artists in the U.S., Japan, and Europe. There are the designs of legendary tattooist Sailor Jerry, which feature dragons, Neptune, and lotus flowers. Visitors will also see examples of another celebrated artist, Ed Hardy, whose works L.A. The variety of media in the exhibition gallery, and it s clear that tattooing is art. stories. Once visitors have discovered the include a fully tattooed Kabuki costume, Musée du quai Branly Jacques Chirac, photo Thierry Olivier, Michel Urtado includes hand-drawn art, videos of tattoo ceremonies, and interview footage of luminary practitioners, as well as the There are 16 of these forms, each based on an arm, leg, or torso of a live model and tattooed by an artist as if it were actual how and why, it s time for a dip into the historical and contemporary practice of tattooing in its many forms around the globe. and images of Jesse Knight, an Englishwoman who was trained to tattoo by her father and became famous for her freehand ability technology and tools of the trade. skin. This first gallery includes the work In the Around the World section, visitors (tattooing without pre-drawn designs). YO U R TAT T O O Tattoo was created by the Musée of Leo Zulueta, the father of modern see clay figurines from ancient Mexico, Our penultimate stop in the exhibition APPOINTMENT du quai Branly in Paris and has stopped in tribal tattooing. carvings from the Congo, and a story about is a flashback to the tattoo cultures of the Toronto s Royal Ontario Museum and most recently, Chicago s Field Museum of Natural History, where it was extended by popular demand. But NHMLA is customizing Tattoo with an L.A. flair for its five-month run. In the next section, visitors get a primer on how this art form is created, through a display of tools and technologies. Whether they use knives or needles made of shark teeth, cactus spines, or a Swiss tattoo artist, as well as contemporary photographs of Chinese tattoos. ART ON THE MOVE After our international tour, we land back Pike in Long Beach and Whittier Boulevard in East Los Angeles. Built as a family friendly amusement park in the early 1900s, the Pike eventually boasted the highest concentration of tattoo parlors in the continental U.S. PUBLIC OPENING Sunday, November 19 MEMBER PREVIEW DAYS Thursday, November 16, metal tattooists across cultures and time in the West to discover the popularity (Turn the page for more on this SoCal scene.) Friday, November 17, and Saturday, November 18 have employed a common method: puncture The exhibition ends with a selection the skin and deposit pigment. One technique of paintings and silicone forms by some of to make ink was to combine the ashes the most exciting artists tattooing today, Free for Members of burnt religious manuscripts with India as well as a look at tattoo s evolution off the Visit NHM.ORG/tattoo ink paste. Another artifact on display is skin and into a style that influences fashion, for more information. a 250-year-old ink pad that belonged to a art, music, and contemporary culture. During 4 5 family in Jerusalem who used candle soot their visit, visitors will be able to step into mixed with wine to tattoo pilgrims looking to commemorate their journey. There s also an electric stencil pen from Thomas Edison that inspired the first electric tattoo machine. a working tattoo shop where they ll have a chance to get permanently inked by an L.A.-based tattoo artist. Whether you leave the exhibition with a skin-deep souvenir or not, we believe Tattoo will leave its mark. Musée du quai Branly Jacques Chirac, photo John Weinstein TATTOO This exhibition was developed and produced by the Musée du quai Branly Jacques Chirac in Paris. WHY TATTOO? This next section of the exhibition illustrates a few of the many reasons for tattoo practice throughout the centuries. In some cultures, tattooing expresses a regional or tribal identity, while in others it provides proof of belonging to a gang or a military or religious Image, top right: a tattoo stencil from Jerusalem; left, a clay whistle fragment from Mexico. Opposite page: a silicone form by Guy Aitchison, below, world renowned for his abstract, biomechanical painting and tattooing; an intricate tattoo by Chuey Quintanar in the black-and-gray style. Musée du quai Branly Jacques Chirac, photo John Weinstein Musée du quai Branly Jacques Chirac, photo Claude Germain

TATTOO A SOCAL STORY INKED L.A. ON VIEW Visitors to Tattoo will see examples of this American traditional style, born out of the Pike, from the moment they enter the gallery. By Josh Chesler Although tattooing has been a cultural art form shops, rides, and other attractions. But when the after Jensen was murdered in his shop by a burglar in a shop, and the quality of Negrete s work was practiced around the globe for 5,000 years, the Navy ships docked at the nearby port and the sailors during the summer of 1976. Long Beach soon paved stellar enough that collectors around Southern modern age of tattooing only began in the early 1950s, when a traveling tattoo artist named Bert Grimm purchased the business at 22 South Chestnut Place in Long Beach. While Grimm wasn t the came ashore, the Pike became a much more adult type of amusement zone where alcohol, overnight romances, and tattoos were the primary draws. Under Grimm s guidance, the quality of tattoos over the Pike and shoreline in favor of expanding their downtown real estate. Despite these struggles, Bert Grimm s continued on, largely thanks to artists like Rick Walters and California took notice. Alongside Negrete s emergence as the streets premiere artist, a shop in East L.A. began providing the same type of tattooing to customers who ENTER THE PARLOR first respected tattoo artist to take over a shop in Southern California approximately a dozen known tattoo parlors existed in the area at the time, including one that had opened in 1927 at Chestnut Place the native Oregonian would become arguably the most influential owner in history. The waterfront stretch of the South Bay where Bert Grimm s World Famous Tattoo stood was known as the Pike a family-friendly area full of and amount of tattoo shops created on the Pike rose exponentially, creating a timeless, bright-and-bold style known as American traditional. Now-legendary Artists like Bob Shaw, Colonel Todd, and Owen Jensen turned the area s next couple of decades into the birthplace of modern tattooing, but a severe rise in crime and abandonment of the amusement zone turned the Pike into a deadly wasteland by the 1970s. Nearly every tattoo shop closed down in the years Phil Sims as well as continuous ownership by the Shaw family. When the shop fell into the wrong hands and was unceremoniously put on the market in 2002, Walters the parlor s long-standing manager knew that a respectable tattoo artist needed to purchase it in order to keep the legacy of the longest-running tattoo shop in America alive. Thankfully, tattooing icon Kari Barba was willing to take on the renovation project, and 22 South Chestnut Place still serves as a world-class shop to this day as Barba s flagship location of Outer Limits Tattoo. While the Pike was focused on developing preferred a shop setting. It didn t take long for Negrete to hear about the work of an artist named Jack Rudy at Good Time Charlie s, and it was only a matter of time before the two would have to meet. Rudy soon invited Negrete to the shop so the artists could erase the mystery surrounding each other, but while the latter was hoping the first meeting would lead to employment, he left with only some new inspiration. Shortly after, tattooing legend Ed Hardy purchased Good Time Charlie s from its original owner, Rudy s mentor Charlie Cartwright, and We ve recreated Bert Grimm s World Famous Tattoo parlor for visitors to see, with a window, chair, tub of Vaseline, and flash examples of the artists designs on paper that were shown to prospective customers when they walked in. the American traditional style of tattooing, in the swiftly hired Negrete to connect with the shop s early 1970s an entirely different type of tattooing primarily Hispanic clientele and assist with the was getting its start just a short drive north in the boom in demand for colorless art. Along with the barrios of East Los Angeles. Freddy Negrete may hiring of Negrete, Hardy also legitimized his new have learned to tattoo during the penitentiary stint shop s iconic work by referring to it as black-and- of his youth, but the skills he learned while doing gray realism rather than joint style tattooing 6 hard time quickly made his Pico Rivera apartment a destination for those looking to get inked. While a decision that likely helped shape the evolution of black-and-gray tattooing. In the decades since, 7 most of Los Angeles s existing tattoo shops were focused on bright colors and simple designs, the style prevalent in prisons at the time was nothing like that. Joint style tattoos were both colorless and significantly more detailed than anything found Opposite page: the Pike in Long Beach, America's first tattoo destination. artists such as Franco Vescovi and Carlos Torres have turned the previously prison- and gang-related style of tattooing into fine art that can be found in high-end homes and galleries around the world today.

SUMMER OF DINOSAURS OUR DIG DIARIES PICK UP A CHISEL IT S TIME TO DIG UP DINOSAURS By Katie McKissick I was really nervous to pick up a chisel and start tap-tap-tapping at was oddly satisfying. I examined the pieces: different colors of rock and I kept tapping and examining. We all mused about how cool it was Downscaling to a smaller chisel, I oh-so-carefully tapped on the rock around the bone I had uncovered, hoping to see more and watch this find take shape. As I cleared away the dark brown clay, an experienced Dinosaur Institute volunteer dripped thin glue onto the greenish bone. This will help protect it, she assured me. Add that to the list of things I never would have known about dinosaur excavations: You have to put glue on the bones to keep them from cracking during the labor-intensive process of excavating them. I kept chipping, slowly, carefully, nervously. There wasn t any more bone. Just rock. Did I miss something? Did I, just as I feared, totally mess something up? No, it s just part of the process of digging up dinosaurs. I hadn t discovered the tip of a large shoulder bone, jaw, or pelvis. I had found just the smallest fragment a little bit of nothingbone, or, as entertained the thought of a worthless dinosaur fossil. I assumed that even the tiniest shard would be worth saving like every bit of bone was a special snowflake. But small, unidentifiable fragments are left behind with the rocks they ve sat next to for so many millions of years. There s no point to cluttering Museum collection shelves with fossils that don t have any research value. While I did not make the dinosaur discovery of the century in my brief stint as a paleontologist, I emerged from the quarry with a deeper appreciation of the work it takes to study these long-dead, remarkable creatures. And now when I see a dinosaur fossil on display at NHMLA, or marvel at the body of knowledge about these extinct reptiles, I think of the people who bent over those fossils, brows sweating and muscles aching, to dust millions of years of sediment off to show them FROM THE QUARRY TO Watch and hear the sounds of chiseling and hammering as you enter the Dinosaur Hall and get up close to the enormous green-hued bones of long-necked dinosaurs in the Dino Lab. the rock. What if I found the most important dinosaur fossil in the history of paleontology and ruined it? (I had really realistic expectations.) After some gentle cajoling from the Dinosaur Institute researchers and volunteers, I found myself sitting in the Gnatalie quarry named for the gnats that plagued researchers clay mixed together brown, light brown, grey, green (oooh, green!). How would I know if I had found any fossils? You ll know it when you see it. Everyone assured me. I really don t know that I will! I kept saying, nervous. So, I kept chipping away at rock next to a large exposed vertebra of a long-dead sauropod. Chip, crack, that these large animals once walked by this spot. I liberated a palm-size chunk of rock and flipped it over. I think I found something! I yelled. They were right. I did know it when I saw it. It was smoother and shinier than rock, and it had intriguing striations all going in one direction. This wasn t just a rock. Yup! That s veteran paleontologists sometimes call it, garbage bone. I d never to the world. It really please forgive me rocks. 8 in years past a living-room-size examine, discard. Chip, crack, examine, bone! they said. excavation pit of 150-million-year-old discard. Does this look like anything Now I was really nervous. When 9 rocks and, oh yeah, dinosaur fossils. I picked up a chisel, held it to the rock, and tapped on it with a heavy hammer. Feeling the rock crumble away after each crack of the chisel to you? I kept asking. The ways the different minerals mixed together sometimes looked suspicious and possibly fossil-esque. Nope, that s just rock. Hmm. you first find a tiny bit of bone, there s no way to know what it might turn out to be. Did I just uncover the tip of an enormous dinosaur femur, vertebra, or (the most precious of all) skull? DIG V I DEOS? See and hear the sounds of the Utah quarry and meet the excavators at Ghost Ranch, New Mexico, at NHM.ORG/rcnews. THE LAB Photos: below left, a large fossil being prepared for transport back to the Museum; McKissick in the quarry, right.

SUMMER OF DINOSAURS OUR DIG DIARIES ON DINOSAUR RANCH By Jessica Portner respective spots under the blazinghot sun and selected the appropriate tools for their job screwdrivers, chisels, brushes, shovels, dental picks, and glue to stabilize the bone in situ. I was given a two-foot-square spot to dig, along with a dental pick and a small brush. The bones at first seemed indistinguishable from the materials around them: charcoal, rock, and clay. It was a bit disconcerting! But the excavators on either side of me supplied helpful tips: charcoal (likely the remains of a big log in an ancient forest) would rub off on my hands; clay was more purple than bone; and the blackish fossil bones could have distinctive shapes, such as crests, bumps, or ridges. My favorite tip: short-lived rains. At the stormwatcher s signal, everyone quickly packed up and protected the exposed fossils from the elements with tin foil and doormats. Even a short drizzle could transform the quarry into bubble gum because the mudstone thickens and gets slippery. Rain is also the reason that many excavators spent days in the field using shovels to dig a touch a fossil to your tongue, and it trench around a massive 1,500-pound BIGGEST: This summer, I was lucky to join a crew My first questions was: How crocodile relative, Vivaron, alongside sticks (because it s porous)! By the container of bones from at least The skull and a three-footlong thigh bone of the of paleontologists, researchers, and did they know to dig here? Partly, long-snouted phytosaurs, heavily end of the day, I found a tiny toe bone four phytosaurs! Until the equipment crocodile-like phytosaur students led by Nate Smith, NHMLA serendipity. A little more than a armored aetosaurs, and Drepanosaurus, of a dinosaur, an armored plate of arrives to haul the big prize away, Dinosaur Institute s Associate Curator, as they returned to Ghost Ranch, New Mexico, to unearth fossils of the earliest dinosaurs to live on Earth. The excavation location, Hayden Quarry, is tucked into a breathtaking decade ago, Smith and his colleagues, all graduate students at the time, headed there after hikers found some fossil bones that had just rolled down the hill. Smith and his fellow paleontologists tracked the path of fossils a reptile with bizarre forelimbs often called monkey lizard. The Dinosaur Institute s discoveries at Ghost Ranch are helping Museum scientists rewrite the story of early dinosaur evolution that an armadillo-like creature, and a twoinch-long tailbone of a dinosaur TBD. BUBBLE GUM QUARRY The crew s meticulous, focused work was frequently interrupted by weather, they had to make sure rain would flow down the mountain instead of pooling around the jacket (jacket is paleospeak for a protective package made from layers of burlap and plaster that supports the weight of the rock and UTAH Jurassic, 150 million years ago THE SCENE: Big dinosaurs roamed what is now Utah when it was covered by forests SMALLEST: landscape of purple, red, and honey- up the mountain and discovered a trail dinosaurs coexisted with their more however. Dark grey clouds brought fossil inside so it can be transported The teeth of early colored mountains. The painter, that has since led to literally tons of primitive dinosaur-like cousins for safely to the lab). crocodile relatives Georgia O Keeffe, made those hills Triassic dinosaur riches. Smith and millions of years. To keep track of each specimen BIGGEST: internationally famous. But after hiking up to the picturesque promontory, the team of excavators simply unfolded their gear and set other scientists were the first to collect and identify the bones of a new dinosaur, Tawa hallae, a long-tailed T. rex ancestor that has only been found What makes this place unusual is it s not just an accumulation of big or small animals, or a single species it s everything mixed together, whether massive or miniscule the crewmembers catalogue their finds with a quarry number, a specimen ID number, the date, and the initials Leg bones from enormous long-necked sauropod dinosaurs to work. They only had a few weeks at Ghost Ranch. In the same ground, Smith says. The take-home is the of the excavators. The spectacular 10 See some of these fossils 11 to coax out the jumbled-up bones of they collected the bones of at least Triassic was weird and dinosaurs are discoveries get shelves in the Ghost in the Dinosaur Hall! small, meat-eating dinosaurs and two other meat-eating dinos found just the beginning. Ranch collection room. their larger reptile contemporaries that ruled the land 212 million years ago during the Late Triassic period, or the Dawn of the Dinosaurs. at the quarry Chindesaurus, and a relative of Coelophysis whose skeletons are in the Dinosaur Hall. There were also the bones of a new DIGGING IN, SLOWLY! On the morning of my first day in the quarry, the crew fanned out to their At the end of each day, it s time to head back to camp to eat and rest for the next day of digging for new surprises embedded in the mountain. Above illustration by Victor Leshyk Illustration, above: More than 212 million years ago, in what is now Ghost Ranch, New Mexico, dinosaurs (like the one pictured in the middle in the background) shared turf with larger reptile contemporaries. Top image of the hand of Tawa halle, a long-tailed T. rex ancestor, which has only been found at Ghost Ranch. Above image: Dinosaur Institute s Associate Curator Nate Smith in Hayden Quarry in Ghost Ranch, New Mexico. Image: Sterling Nesbitt Drawing by Donna Braginetz for UC Berkeley TALLY OF TWO DIGS 2017 NEW MEXICO Triassic, 212 million years ago THE SCENE: Small dinosaurs and large reptiles lived together in what is now New Mexico when the continents were still linked as a single supercontinent, Pangaea. SMALLEST: A drepanosaur tail vertebra tinier than a fingernail

How to Train Your Rat(s) By Kelsey Ziff enclosure daily so there are always new places to hide, climb, chew, groom, and nap. We also use scent training, or spreading unfamiliar smells around the enclosure for the rats to enjoy. We use orange extract and vanilla extract; things they haven t smelled before. The next day you ll come in and find that everywhere you put the new scent R AT STATS SPECIES Rattus norvegicus, also known as brown or Norway rats SEX Female It s mid-morning behind the scenes in Live Animal Programs, and 12 little rats are wide awake and ready to learn. Rats are incredibly intelligent and need daily enrichment in order to stay healthy, even from a young age, says Lead Animal Keeper and resident rat whisperer Justine Smith. Today the young rats are continuing their clicker training, or learning to associate the sound of a clicker with a food reward. Training our live animals serves a dual purpose: It allows our keepers to safely handle the animals in order to weigh them and assess them for health, has been all chewed up because our girls get so excited, says Smith. Once these young rats are old and wellbehaved enough, they ll be moved out from behind the scenes and into public view in the Nature Lab Rat Towers, where the current ratty residents are patiently awaiting retirement. And what does retirement mean for a rat? Smith laughs, We still find ways to stimulate their brains, but they get AVERAGE SIZE AT FIVE MONTHS 150 g. Chickpea is the smallest, at only 102g AVERAGE SIZE FULL-GROWN 220 230 g FAVORITE FOOD Scrambled eggs LEAST FAVORITE FOOD Turnips Miguel and the Mountain Lion The Museum s new pop-up installation, The Story of P-22: L.A. s Most Famous Ordeñana had set up motion-sensing camera traps to capture footage of Ordeñana is as passionate about researching creatures in his urban and it keeps the animals engaged and entertained. It s mentally stimulating for rats to work for their food. In the wild, they d be foraging, so we hide spoiled rotten. We feed them specially steamed vegetables, homemade yogurt popsicles, and, when we feel A GROUP OF RATS IS CALLED a mischief Feline, invites visitors to experience the mountain lion s gripping journey how he was born in the western creatures in the park, and one day he noticed something new the stealthy puma on a nocturnal outing. home as he is studying wildlife around the world. He cocreated the Southern California Squirrel Survey, which asks food around their enclosure or give them enriching like cleaning up tons of cheesy paw Santa Monica Mountains, crossed It was like seeing Bigfoot or Angelenos to share their sightings of toys filled with food to simulate their natural behaviors and get their brains working. Certain toys the rats are better at figuring out how they work prints, we ll give them a puzzle toy filled with Cheez Whiz. Visit us in the Nature Lab! both the 405 and 101 freeways, and eventually reached Griffith Park, where he lives alone in a small territory by chupacabra for the first time, he says. A few weeks later, the mountain lion was found, given a name, and the bushy tailed mammal. He set up acoustic detectors in the Museum s Nature Gardens and local backyards than we humans are, says Smith. When animals get the Hollywood sign. In the exhibit, fitted with a collar with a GPS to capture ultrasonic echolocations bored, they can get destructive toward each other, there s a large map showing where he tracking device. of bats. As part of NHMLA s Citizen themselves, and their environment, which is why it s roams, a soundscape of his habitat, Science Program team, he invites so important to give them lots to do. Our keepers and exclusive video footage of the Furry Neighbors all Angelenos to document wildlife even rearrange the furniture inside the rat charismatic cat. Ordeñana grew up close to Griffith to help scientists answer real-world But we may not know P-22 at Park and remembers being fascinated questions about biodiversity in L.A. all if it weren t for Miguel Ordeñana, with his wild neighbors, which included That kind of curiosity is what 12 NAMING ONE NEW BABY IS HARD ENOUGH, BUT 12? We asked you to send us your best rat name ideas, and you sent us more than 400 suggestions on Facebook and Instagram! Thank you for naming our girls: Rosie, Chickpea, Pickle, Apricot, Mango, Radish, Raisin, Persimmon, Honeydew, Thekla, Hanna, and Thea. Photo by Deniz Durmus NHMLA s Citizen Science Coordinator and wildlife biologist who first spotted the puma in 2012 as part of the Griffith Park Connectivity Study. That project aimed to determine how connected the park is with the rest of the city and if wildlife could make it in or out. By Jessica Portner Photo by Deniz Durmus opossums, raccoons, and coyotes. He earned a bachelor s degree in environmental studies at USC and a master s degree in ecology at UC Davis and has done extensive fieldwork, including studying bobcats in Orange County and jaguars in Nicaragua. draws visitors to the Museum to experience the story of P-22. They want to get up close to the celebrated bigger-than-life feline roaming in the tree-studded canyons across town. Experience The Story of P-22: L.A. s Most Famous Feline. For more information, visit NHM.ORG/P22. 13

ALLIANCE CIRCLE SALON PRIMARY COLOR Sunday, November 5, 4 6 pm NHMLA Trustee Anissa Balson invites you to her art studio for cocktails and hors d oeuvres, where Mineralogy Curator Dr. Aaron Celestian will lead an illuminated discussion about the color of minerals. ALLIANCE CIRCLE LUNCHEON Tuesday, December 12, 11:30 am 2 pm Enjoy a catered lunch and a presentation from Invertebrate Paleontology Collections Manager Austin Hendy. After lunch, join us for a special behind-the-scenes tour. Saturday, October 14 Change of Hart See the William S. Hart Museum from a different point of view. Have a unique opportunity to see a few places that are rarely seen by the general public. MEET OUR NEW PRESIDENT OF THE BOARD The first time Shannon Faulk visited political unrest of the 1960s had a Given Shannon s skill set and ex- For members at the Alliance Circle level ($3,500) and higher. To RSVP or upgrade your membership RSVP required. Call 213.763.3499 or e-mail rsvp@nhm.org. the Museum was with his parents and profound effect on the communityminded perience, he s an ideal board leader and attend, please call 213.763.3253. Free for Members at the Patron Family level ($220) and higher. sister when he was a child in the 1970s. I remember being mesmerized by the larger-than-life creatures on display. The Museum opened up a fascinating world to me and that was exciting, he says. It still is. This month, Faulk becomes the new President of the NHMLA Board of Trustees. Faulk has been connected to the Museum since 2008, when he was appointed to the NHMLA Board of Governors by then Second District Supervisor Yvonne Brathwaite Burke. Faulk was later reappointed to the Board of Governors by current Supervisor and Board Chair Mark leader he would become. He is a big believer in the ways history and science shape one s view of the world and the connection to one s community. After several years in executive sales management and development, Faulk established his own independent insurance agency in Los Angeles through the Farmers Corporation and focused on urban development by providing insurance and financial services products to urban-based community businesses. Dr. Lori Bettison-Varga, the Museum s President and Director, says Faulk is the perfect person to for the years ahead. Faulk feels fortunate to be taking on this new leadership position at such a pivotal time in NHMLA s history on the eve of the 105th anniversary as the Museum embarks upon an ambitious 10-year program to revitalize its historic anchor of Exposition Park. The new Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, the expansion of the California Science Center, the renovation of the Coliseum, and the construction of a new stadium and entertainment venue for the L.A. Football Club both venues for the 2028 summer Olympic Games will draw new crowds to 14 Ridley-Thomas. Today he is one of the move the Museum s strategic goal one of L.A. s oldest cultural parks. board s most tenured members, having of fostering a long-term investment With all this happening at the 15 Open until November 26 participated in several committees and board leadership roles at the Museum. in our local communities forward. In order to become a museum of, same time and everything lining up, we are going to be even more on Faulk s passion for civic leadership for, and with L.A., we have to make a the international stage, Faulk says. Walk through this one-of-a-kind open-air pavilion has Northern California roots; growing commitment to community access a This is the Museum s time. where spiders spin their spectacular webs for all to see. up in Berkeley during the civil and critical priority, Bettison-Varga says. Free for Members. Timed-tickets required. RSVP by calling 213.763.3499 or visit NHM.ORG/spiders. Photo by Deniz Durmus

16 Members Only Spider Pavilion Open now through Sunday, November 26 Walk through the open-air pavilion to learn about the amazing engineering that goes into each spider s web and hear stories from our Gallery Interpreters about these remarkable creatures. Free for Members with timedtickets. Visit NHM.ORG/membertickets. Sponsored by Western Exterminator. Scavenger s Safari Change of Hart Saturday, October 14 See the William S. Hart Museum from a different point of view. It s a unique opportunity to see a few places that are rarely seen by the public. RSVP required. Call 213.763.3499 or e-mail rsvp@nhm.org. Free for Members at the Patron Family level ($220) and higher. Haunted Museum: The Science of Spells Sunday, October 22, 5 pm Join us for appetizers, desserts, a scavenger hunt delving into the science of spells, and flashlight Spider Pavilion tours. To RSVP, visit NHM.ORG/hauntedmuseum, call 213.763.3499, or e-mail fellows@nhm.org by October 13. Alliance Circle Salon Primary Color Sunday, November 5, 4 6 pm NHMLA Trustee Anissa Balson invites you to her art studio for cocktails and hors d oeuvres, where Mineralogy Curator Dr. Aaron Celestian will lead an illuminating discussion about the color of minerals. Tattoo A Special Exhibition Opens Member Preview Days Thursday, November 16 Saturday, November 18 Explore 5,000 years of history, culture, and art connected by ink in this West Coast premiere. Free for Members. This exhibition was developed and produced by the Musée du quai Branly Jacques Chirac in Paris. VIP Reception Wednesday, November 15 Be one of the first to tour Tattoo and meet the exhibition s co-curators and contributing artists. For Members at the Fellows level. To RSVP or to upgrade and attend, call 213.763.3253. Alliance Circle Luncheon Tuesday, December 12, 11:30 am 2 pm Enjoy a catered lunch and a presentation from Invertebrate Paleontology Collections Manager Austin Hendy. After lunch, join us for a special behind-the-scenes tour. For Members at the Alliance Circle level ($3,500) and higher. To RSVP or upgrade your membership to attend, please call 213.763.3253. Free football parking for Fellows Join the Fellows and receive free, reserved home game parking for USC and Rams football games! Fellows also enjoy private tours, VIP events, and more. Call 213.763.3253, visit NHM.ORG/fellows, or e-mail fellows@nhm.org to join. Visit NHM.ORG/ramsnhm for a 10% discount off of a Fellows membership. Events OCTOBER Spider Pavilion Open now through Sunday, November 26 Walk through the open-air pavilion to learn about the amazing engineering that goes into each spider s web and hear stories from our Gallery Interpreters about these remarkable creatures. Visit NHM.ORG/membertickets. Sponsored by Western Exterminator. Adventures in Nature Winter Camp 2018 This Year, Give Your Child the World! Adventures in Nature is a day camp offered every summer and seasonally throughout the school year. Children in grades K 8 have the opportunity to explore a wide variety of Museum topics Earth s features, creatures, and cultures from around the globe. For registration and information about Winter Camp, visit NHM.ORG/AINcamp or contact us at 213.763.3499 or educate@nhm.org. In the Field With NHMLA Journey through the Historic Heart of Los Angeles Saturday, October 14, 9 am 12 pm Travel back in time with NHMLA historians and archeologists to uncover many untold L.A. stories. More than any other place in the city, the Old Plaza area in Downtown Los Angeles home of the Olvera Street market place is layered with historical meaning. Visit NHM.ORG/fieldtrips for more information. NOVEMBER inaturalist Trainings Thursday, November 8, at NHMLA These trainings are designed to get citizen scientists, volunteers, scientists, educators, and project managers trained on how to add observations to the inaturalist platform, and how to create and manage inaturalist projects and bioblitz events. Trainings are free to attend, but RSVP is required. Visit NHM.ORG/nature/visit/events for more information. Second Nature Workshops Holiday Wreaths Tuesday, November 14, 6 8 pm Make your own festive door decoration! Celebrate the season and assemble a holiday wreath a perfect addition to any door, fireplace, or wall. You ll be provided with everything you need to construct the most wonderful decoration, including dried botanicals, fresh aromatics, and a wide assortment of special embellishments. Visit NHM.ORG/workshops. For more information about all events, visit NHM.ORG/calendar. Institutional partner News About the Naturalist Starting this December, the Naturalist will be coming to you quarterly. With Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter issues, we ll bring you the stories you love with more depth than ever before. Also, starting in December, you can keep up with NHMLA online, watch videos, and get the latest on Member events at the new NHM.ORG/naturalist. Come along with us! Ongoing Activities ONGOING AT NHM Dinosaur Encounters Get closer to dinosaurs than you ever thought possible in these amazingly real performances. Gallery Exploration Tour In NHMLA s award-winning tour, a Gallery Interpreter takes you on a journey featuring a new fascinating topic each day. Meet a Live Animal Drop by to meet different animals daily, from bugs to boas. For a schedule, visit NHM.ORG/calendar. ONGOING AT THE LA BREA TAR PITS AND MUSEUM Ice Age Encounters Come face to face with our Saber-toothed Cat don t worry, she s a puppet and learn about life in the Ice Age. Titans of the Ice Age Journey to a world lost in time, buried in ice, and ruled by giants in this exciting 3D film. Free for Members. For information, visit TARPITS.ORG/titans. Presented by LEGEND Natural History Museum La Brea Tar Pits and Museum William S. Hart Museum Overnight Adventures Offsite Adventure NHM Member Events NHM Fellows Events Paid Events 17

Membership Office 900 Exposition Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90007 Telephone 213.763.3426 www.nhm.org/membership Non Profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID Los Angeles, CA Permit no. 13945 In This Issue: Tattoo: A Special Exhibition Opens Digging Up Dinosaurs 2017 HAUNTED MUSEUM COME TO T HE HAUNTED M USEUM Join us for appetizers, desserts, a Scavenger Hunt delving into the science of spells, and flashlight Spider Pavilion tours. To RSVP, visit NHM.ORG/hauntedmuseum, c all 213.763.3499 or e-mail fellows@nhm.org by October 13. 17-0183 SUNDAY, O CTOBER 22, 5 PM