'' by Adrie and Alfons Kennis at the Neanderthal Museum at the Neanderthal Museum man butchering a goat at the Neanderthal Museum at the Neanderthal Museum The museum gives a background of the migration of people from the
savannas to the modern cities with emphasis on Neanderthals. Their life size models are cast and exhibited on the basis of fossils excavated from archaeological sites. The exhibits are displayed on the four floors of the building, which are interconnected through a spiraling ramp. At the beginning of the ramp, in the first section, there are exhibits on the history of the Neanderthal named "A valley and its Secret", which provide information on relics of the skeleton of the Neanderthal. The next exhibit, “A journey through time”, is about crucial stages of human history. Based on the main subject "Evolution of Humankind", the thematic areas spread over five sections exhibit sequentially the "Life and Survival", "Tools and Knowledge", "Myth and Religion", Environment and Nourishment" and "Communication and Society". The museum has a unique collection of casts of the original human fossils which represent the evolution of the
hominids in general, and that of the Neanderthals in particular. This collection, prepared on the basis of finds from various excavated sites in the world, was facilitated by donations by Alfred Krupp von Bohlen and Halbach Foundation. The museum also houses the NESPOS Society e.V. (
Pleistocene People and Places) which provides an interactive database on all anthropological and archaeological data connected with the Neanderthals in the form of "3D–images of CT-Scans and surface scans, as well as high-resolution photographs of human fossils and artifacts". Software, developed digitally by NESPOS on the basis of all fossil collections, is distributed freely, which includes scans of 600 fossils and artifacts from
Belgium,
Croatia,
France and Germany.
Special exhibitions The museum houses special exhibitions. From March 2012 to October 2012, visitors were able to explore an exhibition about monkeys. This was developed by the museum at a cost of €120,000, and had a total of 43,000 visitors. In 2013, it could be seen at the
Naturhistorisches Museum in
Braunschweig. The subsequent special exhibition at the Neanderthal Museum featured wolves and was created by the
Görlitz branch of the
Naturmuseum Senckenberg; it was opened on 18 November 2012 and was on display until 17 March 2013. Over the course of this exhibition, dog owners were allowed to take their dogs into the museum on four days; this initiative was based on the precedent by the
Phaeno Science Center in
Wolfsburg that has an annual dog day. The special exhibition "Ice Age Journey
Greenland" was open until 3 November 2024. It focused on the
archaeology, history and culture of Greenland. ==Services==