The primary mission of the MMNS Paleontology Collection is to both
house and document the spatiotemporal spectrum of prehistoric
animal and plant diversity within the state and to make this
information available for educational and research purposes. The
Paleontology Collection at MMNS, and its supportive Comparative
Osteology Collection, is thus the principal resource for
Mississippi citizens in need of identifying fossils as well as the
bones of modern animals. MMNS Paleontology provides a centralized
institution for in-state and out-of-state scientists studying
Mississippi's natural history through its fossil diversity and
prehistory.

Contact George
Phillips
The Museum of Natural Science (MMNS) is the official state
repository for Mississippi's fossil resources-both specimens and
data. Historically, the U.S. National Museum (USNM) has been the
central repository for fossils (and biological specimens) found
throughout the United States. As USNM staff and funding has not
grown to adequately accommodate the collection and resource needs
required by researchers throughout the country, in-state natural
history collections are needed to meet the needs of educators and
researchers in each state. The MMNS fossil collection also
increases the accessibility of Mississippi fossil resources to
Mississippians-from schoolchildren to research
scientists.

- Total Assigned Catalogue Numbers: 10,000
- Total Number Catalogued Specimens: 30,000
- Number Mississippi Counties Represented: 52 of 82
- Type Specimens Owned by MMNS:
-
- MMNS VP-445 Cynthiacetus maxwelli Uhen
2005, holotype of a Late Eocene archaeocete whale from
Mississippi
- MMNS IP-37 Hardouinia saucierae Phillips et
al., holotype of a Late Cretaceous cassiduloid urchin from
Mississippi
- MMNS IP-1043 Lefortia rozmorganae sp.nov.
(in prep.), holotype of a Late Cretaceous cassiduloid
urchin from Arkansas
- MMNS IP-1245 Hardouinia bowlesi sp. nov. (in
prep.), holotype
- MMNS IP-576 Hardouinia haysi sp. nov. (in
prep.), holotype of a Late Cretaceous cassiduloid urchin from
Mississippi
- Famous holotypes from Mississippi (cast copies
held/displayed at MMNS):
-
- ANSP 12546 Panthera atrox (Leidy 1853), left
lower jaw of an American lion from the Pleistocene of
Natchez, Miss. (Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences)
- USNM V16646 Notiotitanops
mississippiensis Gazin & Sullivan 1942,
skull & lower jaw of a brontothere from the Middle Eocene
of Quitman, Miss. (Smithsonian - National Museum of Natural
History)
- Several early mammals from the latest Paleocene or
earliest Eocene greensand at the Red Hot Truck Stop,
Meridian, Miss. (Carnegie Museum of Natural History)

- State Fossil: Zygorhiza
kochii (Reichenbach 1847), a small Late Eocene
archaeocete whale. The state of Mississippi is so rich
in whale fossils it has been said to lie in the "fossil whale
belt" of the Southeast.
- State Stone: Petrified wood. Visit the Mississippi Petrified Forest!
- Peter Kuchirka, Volunteer Preparator
- Joy Rushing, Volunteer Technician
- Rosanne Horne, Volunteer Technician
- Chuck Ciampaglio, Wright State University, Celina, Ohio
- David T. Dockery, Mississippi Office of Geology, Jackson,
Mississippi
- James Lamb, McWane Science Center, Birmingham, Alabama
- Earl Manning, Davenport, Iowa
- James E. Starnes, Mississippi Office of Geology, Jackson,
Mississippi

Fossils in the MMNS Paleontology Collection are described and
imaged at the following:
Out-of-State Museums with Mississippi fossil
holdings: