Myles de Bastion. Photo: Sam Gehrke

Meet Myles de Bastion, our STEAM Keynote Speaker

October 11, 2022

Myles de Bastion. Photo: Sam Gehrke. By Micah Beasley, PR & Marketing Coordinator The Museum is pleased to welcome Myles de Bastion as our keynote speaker for the 10th annual STEAM Career Showcase for Students with Disabilities this year. Myles is an artistic director, musician and creative-altruist who develops technology and art installations that enable… Read More >


BugFest 2022

BugFest is back and buggier than ever! In person at NC Museum of Natural Sciences, Sept. 17

September 8, 2022

(RALEIGH, N.C.) — For the first time in three years, the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences’ largest annual event is back in person. BugFest, the largest one-day bug-centric event in the country, introduces Museum guests to a range of arthropods from North Carolina and around the world. Satisfy all your web weaving, wing flapping,… Read More >


Loggerhead Sea Turtle hatchlings flip-flop to the sea under moonlight

Topsail Sea Turtle Trip

September 7, 2022

By Greg Skupien, Curator of the Naturalist Center On Wednesday, August 10, staff and participants arrived on Topsail Beach on the Museum’s annual sea turtle trip. That evening we headed out to the beach and staked out our spots in front of a Loggerhead Sea Turtle nest that had been incubating for 63 days. The… Read More >


What remains of Skinny Dip Falls, next to a cell phone photo of the falls as they existed before the tropical storm.

Skinny Dip Falls — The Naked Truth

August 30, 2022

What remains of Skinny Dip Falls, next to a cell phone photo of the falls as they existed before the tropical storm. Photo: Chris Smith. By Chris Smith, Coordinator of Current Science Programs Picture in your mind the most pristine mountain waterfall you can imagine. Now, imagine a giant bulldozer driving down the middle of… Read More >


Artistic reconstruction of the reptile adaptive radiation in a terrestrial ecosystem during the warmest period in Earth’s history. Image depicts a massive, big-headed, carnivorous erythrosuchid (close relative to crocodiles and dinosaurs) and a tiny gliding reptile at about 240 million years ago. The erythrosuchid is chasing the gliding reptile and it is propelling itself using a fossilized skull of the extinct Dimetrodon (early mammalian ancestor) in a hot and dry river valley. Image: Henry Sharpe.

Global warming spawned the age of reptiles

August 19, 2022

Artistic reconstruction of the reptile adaptive radiation in a terrestrial ecosystem during the warmest period in Earth’s history. Image depicts a massive, big-headed, carnivorous erythrosuchid (close relative to crocodiles and dinosaurs) and a tiny gliding reptile at about 240 million years ago. The erythrosuchid is chasing the gliding reptile and it is propelling itself using… Read More >