Genera from right to left: Mammuthus, Megatherium, Camelops, Bison, Arctodus, Glyptodon, Smilodon, Teratornis, Castoroides, Canis, Miracinonyx, and Homo. (I don't know what genus the whale skeleton is supposed to belong to.)
@Onychorhynchus coronatus@UngulateNerd92@Hipporex I just wish they utilized large murals and more signage that was intuitive to follow for Elephant Odyssey, instead of having small signs at the rails and just having statues of extinct animals next to their living counterparts with seemingly no way of linking the two.
@UngulateNerd92 The museum was and is closed to the public due to COVID. Had it been open, I likely would of uploaded a lot more pictures. But from what I've seen in videos it look like a nice little museum but is very small. @Onychorhynchus coronatus I believe that the "California condor" is actually suppose to be a Teratornis (a large bird of prey related to modern New World vultures).
@Hipporex ah thank you for letting me know. Having seen some videos of the inside of the museum, it did look like a nice place. Let us know if and when you go and tell us about it.
Jumping onto the California condor bandwagon myself, pardon that brain fart. It definitely looks like a Teratornis sp.