A Summer of Excitement at Dallas’ Perot Museum

Panoramic view of the plaza of the Perot Museum of Nature and Science, Dallas, Texas. Photo by Joe Mabel.
Panoramic view of the plaza of the Perot Museum of Nature and Science, Dallas, Texas. Joe Mabel photo.

Ultimate Dinosaurs, Being Human and Racing a Cheetah among the Summer’s highlights

By Brian Gage

If you’re looking to “amaze your brain” this summer, look no further than the internationally acclaimed Perot Museum of Nature and Science in Dallas, Texas.

A Michelin Green Guide Three-Star destination, the Perot Museum is the top cultural attraction in the Dallas/Fort Worth area, located right in Victory Park.

The museum is a nonprofit educational organization whose mission is to provide inspiration to budding scientists, mathematicians, and engineers, with its five-floor facility.

The museum contains 11 permanent exhibit halls, a children’s museum, a traveling exhibit hall and a theater showcasing the National Geographic Experience.

New for 2023 at the Perot Museum

“THE SCIENCE BEHIND PIXAR” offers a behind-the-screen look at the process, science, and technology that go into the making of beloved films like “Toy Story,” “Finding Nemo” and “Coco”.

Making its Texas debut “The Science Behind Pixar” offers a unique look into the Pixar filmmaking process. Exploring the nearly 10,000-square-foot exhibition, visitors will learn about the science and technology used to create their most beloved animated films and characters.

Admission cost ranges from $13-$38 depending on the experience you are looking to enjoy, and the museum is open 10 am-6 pm Monday-Saturday and 11 am-6 pm on Sundays for special summer hours.

There is a great deal to be excited about at the Perot Museum this summer, so be sure to make your reservations soon!

Prehistoric Predators

Visitors examining fossilized remains in the Ultimate Dinosaurs exhibition. Photos from Perot Museum website.
Visitors examining fossilized remains in the Ultimate Dinosaurs exhibition. Photos from Perot Museum website.

This past June, the museum unveiled a fantastic new traveling exhibit called Ultimate Dinosaurs. This exciting exhibition showcases 17 fascinating and extremely rare breeds of dinosaurs that thrived in Africa and South America, most being quite unfamiliar to the average North American.

Ranging from the larger-than-life Gigantosaurus to the puny Eoraptor, these rambunctious reptiles ruled the world millions of years ago and are now on display for the public to behold.

Among the selection of fantastic beasts is the world’s first installation of an 85-foot Alamosaurus and the skull cast of the Nanuqsaurus hoglundi, a smaller cousin of the Tyrannosaurus Rex.

The Ultimate Dinosaurs exhibit tells the origin story of our continents, how they once were fully connected as a supercontinent called Pangea, and how their separation resulted in such massive evolutionary diversity in dinosaurs.

The exhibit also houses 15 full sized dinosaur casts, a plethora of prehistoric artifacts, an augmented reality experience that allows visitors to come face to face with some of the most ferocious dinos in the flesh, and many hands-on features that allow visitors to feel fossilized remains and interact with miniature dioramas.

Ultimate Dinosaurs is presented in English and French (with a Spanish audio guide available) and the whole experience costs somewhere in the range of $21-$30. Entry to the 11 permanent exhibits is included with the purchase of a ticket for the exhibit, as well as your choice of one of three fascinating 3-D films.

Being Human

Visitors performing an experiment in the Being Human exhibit.
Visitors performing an experiment in the Being Human exhibit.

After closing for a brief period, the Being Human exhibit at the Perot Museum has returned bigger and better than ever!

The first completely transformed exhibit hall since the museum’s opening five years ago, Being Human explores several key aspects essential to the human journey.

Since its reintroduction, the Being Human exhibit has doubled its number of interactive displays and added a huge assortment of innovative content and fascinating experiments.

The exhibit features an intact, preserved human brain and spinal cord which demonstrates to visitors the inner mechanisms of their most important organ.

The exhibit focuses on many of the traits and abilities that have evolved in humans over thousands of years which make us stick out as intellectual and exceedingly social creatures.

As such, the exhibit allows for children and adults alike to work together and use their brains to perform experiments like examining the electricity within a living worm and exploring the DNA of wheat under a microscope.

Visitors testing their speed at the Run Wall of the Lamar Family Sports Hall.
Visitors test their speed at the Run Wall of the Lamar Family Sports Hall.

In addition, the exhibit contains a state-of-the-art virtual reality experience that places visitors in the center of a South African cave that is home to the new discovery of Homo naledi, a human ancestor.

Other Exciting Displays

Along with its newer additions, the Perot Museum has a truly enormous amount of interesting permanent displays to behold for those who have never visited.

The Lamar Hunt Family Sports Hall grants visitors a scientifically-driven means of getting active.

You can race simulated versions of top athletes, a cheetah or a T. Rex on the 55-foot Run Wall, perform a variety of athletic feats in front of a high-speed camera to compare your skills with

The cutting-edge Journey Through the Solar System experience in the Expanding Universe Hall.
The cutting-edge Journey Through the Solar System experience in the Expanding Universe Hall.

professional athletes, and measure your reaction time with a light board and timer. This exhibit is definitely the place for the more stir-crazy of visitors.

In the Expanding Universe Hall, visitors can get a first-class ticket on a journey around the solar system.

A cutting-edge simulation allows guests to cruise through the night sky from planet to planet and get a good look at many of the fascinating aspects of the massive tract of space that makes up our solar neighborhood.

You can also play an interactive game about the asteroid belt and take a selfie with a floating astronaut.

And in the Lyda Hill Gems and Mineral Hall, you are able to crack open a 5-foot geode and check out one of the biggest gold nuggets still in existence.

Visitors observing some of the beautiful minerals found in the Lyda Hill Gems and Mineral Hall.
Visitors observe some of the beautiful minerals found in the Lyda Hill Gems and Mineral Hall.

We’ve merely scratched the surface of the massive amount of exciting features the Perot Museum has to offer, and a visit to the facility is sure to keep guests of all ages entertained for hours.

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2 thoughts on “A Summer of Excitement at Dallas’ Perot Museum

  1. Victory Park campus
    The 180,000 square feet facility has 6 floors and stands about 14 stories high. It has five floors which are accessible to the public and houses 11 permanent exhibit halls as well as 6 learning labs.The top-most floor houses the museum’s administration offices. The Victory Park campus opened its doors to the public on December 1, 2012. Approximately 6,000 visitors came to the museum on its first day of operation.

  2. This will my next travel destination, I have added it to my next travel bucket list. Hope we will enjoy the trip to Dallas’ Perot.

    Thanks for sharing this wonderful information with us.

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