PaleoFest Daily Schedules

Click a date to see schedules:

Friday, March 6, 2026

 Members Honorary Kick Off Event

  • 5:30 pm – Main Museum Open
    • Doors Open for Reception:  Appetizers & Cash Drinks
    • Will Call Open to pick up tickets and pre-purchased  merchandise
  • 6:00 pm – Check-in for  Nano vs. T. rex Dino Craft Lab. Child drop offs permitted–enjoy the talk while your children learn at their own pace about the same topic!
    • 6:15pm: Nano vs. T. rex Dino Craft Lab Begins.
  • 6:15pm  Dr. James Napoli: “Nanotyrannus lethaeus: how new evidence revealed Rockford’s own tyrannosaur species was hiding in plain sight”
    • Join one of the lead authors of the groundbreaking 2025 Nature paper on the reclassification of “Jane.” from Stonybrook University.
    • Hear the inside story of how Nanotyrannus was officially recognized as a distinct species.
  • 7:30 pm – Museum Closes


The Scientist Who Solved the  Mystery of “Jane”
Dr. James Napoli is an evolutionary biologist and vertebrate paleontologist at Stony Brook University who has spent years investigating one of science’s most heated debates: Was “Jane” a baby T. rex, or something entirely new?
In a historic Nature paper (October 2025), Dr. Napoli and his team provided the definitive answer. By examining over 200 tyrannosaur fossils and using cutting-edge 3D modeling, he proved that Nanotyrannus is a real, distinct species—not just a young T. rex.
Why you can’t miss this session:
The Inside Story of Nanotyrannus lethaeus: Dr. Napoli named this new species after the River Lethe (the river of forgetfulness), a nod to how this predator remained “hidden in plain sight” for decades.
Rewriting the History Books: For 30 years, scientists modeled T. rex growth using these fossils. Dr. Napoli will explain why he says paleontology now needs to “demolish the building and rebuild it” to correct our understanding of the dinosaur world.
The “Dueling Dinosaurs” Connection: Hear the high-stakes details of his work with the Dueling Dinosaurs specimen—a Nanotyrannus and Triceratops locked in a prehistoric battle—and how it helped confirm Jane’s true identity.

Join us at the Friday Honorary Member Kick-Off to meet the man who officially gave Rockford’s favorite dinosaur a name of her own.

Pro-Tip: Dr. Napoli is a master at making complex anatomy sound like a detective story. This is the perfect talk for anyone who loves a good scientific mystery or wants to know how new technology is changing what we know about the past.

Children Workshop: Friday Night T. rex vs Nano Craft Lab! Register Here

 

🎟️ Tickets that include Friday Night Talk

Saturday, March 7 General Activities

 

10:00 am Doors Open for non-lecture ticket holders Main Entrance 737 N. Main Street
10:00am Paleo Marketplace Shopping See Museum Map for Multiple Locations
10:30-11:30 Workshop: Survivors of the Cretaceous: Live Animals! CL2
10:30-11:30 Workshop: Hell Creek Rock Stars: Dinosaurs That Changed the Story CL3
1:00-1:30 pm Burpee Rocks Reading WtW
1:30-2:30pm Workshop: Survivors of the Cretaceous: Live Animals! CL 2
1:30-2:30 pm Workshop: Hell Creek Rock Stars: Dinosaurs That Changed the Story CL 3
2:30-3:00 pm Lecture Break (expect crowds at food vendors) Main Museum
2:30-3:30 pm Workshop:Survivors of the Cretaceous: Live Animals! CL2
2:30-3:30 pm Workshop: Hell Creek Rock Stars: Dinosaurs That Changed the Story CL3
3:30-4:30 pm Workshop:  Nano vs. T. rex Dino Craft Lab:
5:00 pm Museum Closes to guests without Dinner & Keynote Tickets Main Museum

More discoveries are coming!
This schedule will be updated as PaleoFest approaches to include paleontologist meet-and-greets, Cretaceous Trail game sessions, giveaways, and additional General Admission activities.

🎟️ Workshop Tickets for Individuals

Workshops can be purchased individually with the following options (each includes General Admission):


🎟️Coming with a Group of 4 or More?

Save by choosing one of our group and family packages, which include workshop access:


🔎 Helpful Reminder

Workshop seats are limited and must be reserved in advance, even with a workshop-inclusive ticket.

Saturday, March 7 Lecture Schedule

 

8:30 am Doors Open for Research Ticket Holders Main Museum
9:15 am Lecture Hall Opening Remarks Riverview Room
9:30- 10 am

Willie Friemuth, North Carolina State University 

Utah’s Sister Sickle-Makers: paleobiological insights from two therizinosaurian bonebeds

Riverview Room
10- 10:30 am

 Mary Droser

Animals, Sediments, Slime, Muck and Goo:  The Record of Earth’s Early Animals and their Environments with Implications for Discovering Life Elsewhere

Riverview Room
10:30-11 am Lecture Break
11:00-11:30 am

John Moretti, University of Texas

Exploration of water caves in central Texas reveals previously unknown aspects of the Ice Age animal community

Riverview Room
11:30-12 pm 

Madelyn Turala, East Tennessee State University

Estimating body size of extinct crocodilians based on skeletal remains

Riverview Room
12:00-1 pm Lunch Break Mahlburg Auditorium
1:30-2 pm

Mitchell Riegler, University of Florida

Hidden Anatomy of Worm Lizards: New Insights from Modern Imaging and 56 Million years of Fossils

Riverview Room

Courtney Sprain, University of Florida

T-Rex and the Crater of Doom?

Riverview Room
2:30-3:00 pm Lecture Break Main Museum
3:00-3:30 pm

Fatima Husain, MIT

“Eukaryotic life from a Snowball Earth analogue environment on the McMurdo Ice Shelf, Antarctica”

Riverview Room
4:00-4:30 pm

Dr. Thomas Dudgeon, Royal Ontario Museum

“TBD”

Riverview Room
5:00 pm Museum Closes to non dinner & Keynote Guests Main Museum

 

Saturday Evening, March 7th, 2026

Location: Burpee Museum Woodward Traveling Exhibition Hall

5:00 pm  PaleoReception in Museum Halls including cash bar, networking, and music
5:30 pm VIP Doors Open for Dinner Seating
6:00pm Doors Open for All to PaleoReception & Dinner Seating
6:30 pm Dinner Service
7:30 pm  Keynote- Dr. Jingmai O’Connor: Archaeopteryx: Food for flight
8:30-9:00pm Live Auction of Special Paleo Items
🎤 Keynote Speaker: Dr. Jingmai O’Connor
The “Punk Rock Paleontologist” & The Icon of Evolution
Known to the world as the “Punk Rock Paleontologist,” Dr. Jingmai O’Connor is the Associate Curator of Fossil Reptiles at the Field Museum and one of the most prolific researchers in the field today. With over 160 scientific papers and nearly 50 new species described, she has spent her career solving the greatest mystery in natural history: how dinosaurs first took to the skies.
Why you can’t miss this session:
  • The “Holy Grail” of Fossils: Jingmai served as the lead scientific advisor for the Chicago Archaeopteryx—one of only 13 specimens ever found and arguably the most important transitional fossil in history.
  • Breaking News Research: Hear firsthand about her latest study published in Nature (May 2025), which used UV light and CT scans to reveal “invisible” feathers and soft tissues that prove exactly how this “missing link” used its wings to fly.
  • A “Researchaholic” with Style: Jingmai is famous for her high-energy, relatable speaking style that bridges the gap between hard science and pure wonder. Whether she’s discussing “dead bird nerd” facts or how birds survived the asteroid that killed T. rex, her passion is contagious.
Join us for the Saturday Keynote Dinner to go behind the scenes of the “Chicago Archaeopteryx” discovery and witness the spectacular evolution of flight through the eyes of the scientist who is currently rewriting it.

Pro-Tip: If you have budding young scientists in your family, Dr. O’Connor is also the author of the award-winning children’s book, When Dinosaurs Conquered the Skies—she may even sign your copy!

Sunday, March 8 General Activities

Sunday 3/8/2026

10:00 am Doors Open for All Ticket Holders Main Museum
10:00am Paleo Marketplace Shopping See Museum Map for Multiple Locations
10:30-11:30 Workshop: Survivors of the Cretaceous: Live Animals! CL2
10:30-11:30 Workshop: Hell Creek Rock Stars: Dinosaurs That Changed the Story CL3
1:00-1:30 pm Burpee Rocks Reading WtW
1:30-2:30pm Workshop: Survivors of the Cretaceous: Live Animals! CL 2
1:30-2:30 pm Workshop: Hell Creek Rock Stars: Dinosaurs That Changed the Story CL 3
2:30-3:30 pm Workshop: Survivors of the Cretaceous: Live Animals! CL2
2:30-3:30 pm Workshop: Hell Creek Rock Stars: Dinosaurs That Changed the Story CL3
3:30-4:30 pm Workshop: Nano vs. T. rex Dino Craft Lab CL3
5:00 pm Museum Closes Main Museum

More discoveries are coming!
This schedule will be updated as PaleoFest approaches to include paleontologist meet-and-greets, Cretaceous Trail game sessions, giveaways, and additional General Admission activities.

🎟️ Workshop Tickets for Individuals

Workshops can be purchased individually with the following options (each includes General Admission):


🎟️Coming with a Group of 4 or More?

Save by choosing one of our group and family packages, which include workshop access:


🔎 Helpful Reminder

Workshop seats are limited and must be reserved in advance, even with a workshop-inclusive ticket.

Sunday, March 8 Lecture Schedule

Sunday 3/8/2026

9:00 am Doors Open for Research Ticket Holders Main Museum
9:45 am Lecture Hall Opening Remarks Riverview Room
10:00- 10:30 am

Dr. Kimi Chappelle, Stony Brook University

Life at the dawn of dinosaur reproduction: growth and faunal diversity from one of the oldest known dinosaur nesting sites

Riverview Room
10:30- 11:00 am

 

Lauren Wilson, Princeton University

The evolution of palatal development in the common ancestor of living birds

Riverview Room
11:00-11:30 am Lecture Break
11:30-12:00 am

Lee Hall, Museum of the Rockies

“A Science Passed by Hand: Why Informal Training In Paleontological Conservation Is No Longer
Enough”

Riverview Room
12:00-12:30 pm  Kelsey Arkle, Augustana College Riverview Room
12:30-2 pm Lecture Lunch Break Mahlburg Auditorium
2:00-2:30 pm

Henry Thomas, Idaho State University

Dawn of the Feathered Serpents: The Evolution and Diversity of Azhdarchid Pterosaurs

Riverview Room
2:30-3:00 pm

Joshua Mathews, Burpee Museum

Hell Creek underfoot: A look at the geology and microfauna of Carter County, Montana

Riverview Room
3:00-3:30 pm Lecture Break Main Museum
3:30-4:00 pm

 Lena Cole, University of Oklahoma

Going with the flow: reconstructing ancient communities and ecological evolution from the crinoid fossil record

Riverview Room
4:00-4:30 pm

Dr. Thomas Holtz, University of Maryland

A Small State with Some Big Dinosaurs: Maryland in the Mesozoic

Riverview Room
5:00 pm Museum Closes Main Museum

 

About Burpee Museum’s PaleoFest

Since 1999, PaleoFest has become an internationally recognized and respected program that celebrates the science of Paleontology. PaleoFest is an exemplary program to excite, educate, and inspire all people in science. This 3-day event includes many educational programs and activities for all levels of interest in paleontology. Each year, PaleoFest attracts nearly 2,000 visitors and some of the biggest names in the field.