|Tualatin Public Library||[[Tualatin, Oregon]] ||<ref>{{Cite web| title = Tulatin's Mastodon| publisher = City of Tulatin, Oregon| url = https://www.tualatinoregon.gov/community/tualatins-mastodon| accessdate = 5 May 2018}}</ref>
|Tualatin Public Library||[[Tualatin, Oregon|Tualatin]] ||<ref>{{Cite web| title = Tulatin's Mastodon| publisher = City of Tulatin, Oregon| url = https://www.tualatinoregon.gov/community/tualatins-mastodon| accessdate = 5 May 2018}}</ref>
^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.
^"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.
^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.