^Abrams, Michael (4 March 2015), "Hesse State Museum reopens with more art and history", Stars and Stripes, retrieved 5 May 2018, The giant mastodon skeleton still stands in the entrance to the second-floor geological and life history exhibit; the ground floor still has its large collection of zoology specimens and wildlife dioramas; and the museum's wonderful Art Nouveau collection is still in the basement.
^"Fossil Collection". Florida Department of Environmental Protection. Retrieved 15 May 2018. In Tallahassee, visitors at the Museum of Florida History can view "Herman," a mastodon skeleton recovered by FGS staff in 1930 from the depths of Wakulla Springs.
^Nuland, Lawson (5 November 2017), "Florida Museum holds belated National Fossil Day", The Independent Florida Alligator, retrieved 15 May 2018, Almost all the fossils on display were found in Florida. Paul Roth, a volunteer with the Florida Paleontological Society, said Florida has a variety of fossils and creatures. "(There are) mammoths and mastodons, there's other extinct creatures like the American cheetah, there's just, there's a lot of fossils in Florida," Roth said.
^"Mastodons". Illinois State Museum. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
^Lord, Steve (2 March 2018), "Mastodon model approved for Aurora exhibit at Phillips Park", Aurora Beacon-News, retrieved 5 May 2018, The bones have been displayed at several museums over the years and today are showcased in the Mastodon Gallery at the Phillips Park Visitors Center.
^Associated Press (19 March 2014), "Vassar Mastodon has new home at upstate NY school", The Washington Times, retrieved 5 May 2018, Steve Butz, a science teacher at Cambridge High School, says the New York State Museum has permanently loaned parts of the Vassar Mastadon's skeleton to his school.
^Miller, Ben H. (January 19, 2019). "Making The Third Planet". Extinct Monsters. Retrieved January 28, 2022.
^Clark, Brian E. (9 March 2018), "A mastodon and a meteor older than Earth are highlights of the UW Geology Museum", Journal Sentinel, retrieved 5 May 2018, If you want to touch a hunk of roughly 4.56-billion-year-old meteorite that predates Earth, view fossilized bones from two mastodons that wandered western Wisconsin during the Ice Age or learn more about the universe, the University of Wisconsin-Madison Geology Museum is well worth a visit.