We take a look inside the new orca exhibition at the Natural History Museum

Orcas News

We take a look inside the new orca exhibition at the Natural History Museum
OrcaKiller WhaleNatural History Museum

Robert Garrova covers criminal justice for the LAist and KPCC newsroom.

explores the weird and secret bits of SoCal that would excite even the most jaded Angelenos. He also covers mental health.explores the weird and secret bits of SoCal that would excite even the most jaded Angelenos.

He also covers mental health. This story is free to read because readers choose to support LAist. If you find value in independent local reporting, Orcas, the lovable black and white marine predators, have taken over 10,000 square feet of the Natural History Museum of L.A. County.

, which opened Sunday, includes floor to ceiling screens that play orcas swimming in the wild and a life-size replica of Ruffles. He was one of the first orcas Alisa Schulman-Janiger, lead research biologist for the California Killer Whale Project, saw in the wild back in the 80s.

“It’s not him but it represents him. And I can actually go back in time and replay: I was standing here and my boyfriend who became my husband was standing next to me... seeing them under us foraging for fish,” she said. If you're enjoying this article, you'll love our daily newsletter, The LA Report. Each weekday, catch up on the 5 most pressing stories to start your morning in 3 minutes or less.

Schulman-Janiger, who is also a research associate for the museum, said there was a sighting of these giants – the largest members of the dolphin family – in our local waters just this month.

“In the Channel Islands,” she said. “I just looked at some photos today sent to me by one of the naturalists... and she saw at least 16 different orcas. ” There are 140 original artifacts and specimens to see and experience at the immersive show, including sculptures and masks by Indigenous artists of the Pacific Northwest Coast.

“It is just so unique in the breadth of topics that it covers, both in indigenous relationships with orcas, the research and more particularly our human relationship and the tumultuous relationship that has in media and captivity and even whale watching,” DeNisco told LAist. LAist is one of the Natural History Museum’s media partners for the exhibition, Orcas: Our Shared Future. You come to LAist because you want independent reporting and trustworthy local information.

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