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Animal Eyes features five exhibit areas:

Animal Eyes: Human Eye Mode
Animal Eyes: Human Eye Model
Photo by Charlotte Fiorito
Different Kinds of Eyes
This section compares the many different kinds of eyes in the animal kingdom. Some eyes only sense the difference between light and dark, and other eyes, like our own, make an image. Some animals' eyes create images with mirrors, while others use lenses. This section features the eyes of the human, earthworm, sea star, nautilus, scallop, fly, and eagle.


Different Places on Different Faces
In this area, visitors can learn where animals' eyes are located and how their eye positions help them survive. Hands-on activities teach visitors about their own binocular vision and peripheral vision. Through interactive components and photographs, visitors can discover some animals with eyes in unique positions on their heads or bodies. In addition to human eyes, this area explores the eyes of the American woodcock, monkey, ground squirrel, lion, zebra, duck, rabbit, chameleon, stalk-eyed fly, hammerhead shark, snail, whale, and crab.

Night Eyes
Models and hands-on components show how nocturnal animals need certain "equipment"-big eyes, big pupils, many rods in their retinas, and/or a reflective tapetum to see well at night. This section features the eyes of the human, raccoon, great horned owl, tarsier, moth, and hatchet fish.

Seeing In Color
This section emphasizes scientific research into animal color vision. Visitors can find out what scientists know about color vision and how they know it. Visitors can learn about cones, the special light-sensitive cells in the human retina, and also compare their color vision with the color vision of other animals. This area features the eyes of the human, dog, bee, and mantis shrimp.

3 Eyes, 5 Eyes, 8 Eyes, More
This section highlights animals with more than two eyes. Visitors can learn not only the number, but the location of these animals' eyes. Featured animals include the spider, tuatara, lizard, sea star, horseshoe crab, grasshopper, and scallop.
 
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