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Explore LA

Last chance to see the La Brea Tar Pits before they close for 2 years

A mammoth skeleton towers overhead with huge tusks.
A mammoth on display at the La Brea Tar Pits.
(
Robert Garrova
/
LAist
)

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With LACMA’s new David Geffen Galleries just steps away, it may be easy to forget that we have the richest Ice Age fossil site on Earth right here with the La Brea Tar Pits.

But the museum and research facilities at the tar pits are also scheduled for a multimillion dollar renovation.

Built in 1977, the George C. Page Museum at the tar pits has a special place in the hearts of Angelenos who’ve ever taken a field trip to see its massive mastodon skeletons or dire wolf skulls. Or have maybe shed a tear at the sculptures of the mammoth family in distress in the Lake Pit out front.

All that stuff is staying, museum educator Kay Lai told LAist, but new interactive exhibits will allow visitors to better understand the science that’s happening in their own backyard.

A digital rendering of a new outdoor amphitheater at the La Brea Tar Pits
A rendering of the new outdoor amphitheater at the La Brea Tar Pits.
(
Courtesy the Natural History Museums of Los Angeles County
)

The transformation

“This museum, as beloved as it is, definitely needs that refresh,” Lai said. “And I’m really excited for the next generation of kids that gets to grow up and make new memories here with this new space.”

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Lai said the museum refresh will include a new focus on Zed — the 80% complete Columbian mammoth found here — and other notable animals they’ve unearthed over the decades. The mammoth’s bones will be reassembled and Zed will “stand tall for the first time since the Ice Age,” according to the museum’s website.

La Brea Tar Pits
Open now through July 6
5801 Wilshire Blvd., L.A.
Daily, 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Museum admission required; free for members

“We’re able to focus on the very first saber-toothed cat fossils that we’ve ever discovered ... As well as some of our Ice Age survivors ... like Pebbles the Puma ... Pebbles would have been the ancestor of some of the mountain lions that still live in Los Angeles today, including P-22 that passed away a couple years ago,” Lai said.

Then there’s the fish bowl: you know, the fossil lab with windows where you can watch researchers at work?

An even better fish bowl

“So we’ll still have the fish bowl, but it’s going to be much more interactive and there’ll be much more discussion of what’s going on inside the fossil lab,” said Regan Dunn, assistant deputy director and curator at the new Samuel Oschin Global Center for Ice Age Research.

A digital rendering shows the future 'fish bowl' fossil lab at the La Brea Tar Pits.
A digital rendering of the new fish bowl at the Samuel Oschin Global Center for Ice Age Research.
(
Courtesy the Natural History Museums of Los Angeles County
)
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Dunn explained that the area where they store their collections of fossils and other specimens is getting major updates too.

“Super valuable, millions of specimens, will be in upgraded systems where there’s climate control. There’ll be enclosed cabinets and be under much better maintenance. And also allow for much more research to happen,” she said.

The La Brea Tar Pits are still very much an active paleontological research site. Dunn said any time a hole goes in the ground in the Hancock Park area, a new discovery is made.

With new outdoor classrooms and a 1-kilometer pedestrian pathway that will take visitors past excavation sites, the idea is to make the research going on here more visible to the public.

Your last chance to visit the tar pits before its two-year transformation is July 6.

An aerial view rendering of the grounds at the updated La Brea Tar Pits. A large circular path with people walking on it.
A digital rendering showing the aerial view of the updated La Brea Tar Pits grounds.
(
Courtesy the Natural History Museums of Los Angeles County
)

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