Natural History Museums, one of the scientific and cultural symbols of developed countries, are contemporary non-formal educational institutions that gather activities on the national and local scale, collect the knowledge of nature assets, archive and exhibit activities for social / cultural tourism. Natural History Museums serve as a bridge between the past and present starting from the formation of the globe. In order to enable us to perceive the living and non-living environment as a whole, we are the centers of science that exhibit the nature assets with the current and fossil samples and undertakes the educational service with the aim of informing the society. In addition, the Natural History Museums, which have the function of raising the consciousness of nature and the importance and conservation of biodiversity and transfering the cultural values gained by the society through generations, are the institutions that raise awareness about the sustainability of life. The Burdur basin and the Burdur Formation at its base are composed of visual deposits. Due to the tectonic movements occurring in the basin, swampy areas have gradually become a lake. Burdur Pliocene Lake, known as the lake in the south of this lake Elmacık vertebrate fossil bed is one of the most fertile fossil beds in the region. With the permission of the General Directorate of Cultural Heritage and Museums in Burdur in the fossil beds of vertebrate mammals around the Elmacık Irrigation Pond on the Elmacık Creek in the province of Burdur in the province of Burdur in the Burdur basin of southwestern Anatolia Animal fossils unearthed during the scientific excavations carried out under the direction of the Archaeological Museum Directorate were collected with a four-season study and formed the exhibition material of the museum. It has been determined that approximately 2.5 - 2 million years ago today, there are large plains and steppe-type ecology in Burdur region and Mammuthus meridionalis (southern elephant), one of the extinct terrestrial vertebrate mammalian species, indicates the presence of forested areas and large water bodies in the basin. Among the elements of the Burdur Elmacık fauna (animal community), Bovidae (Hornbill) and Rhinocerotidae (Gergedangiller) are very valuable for the first time in Anatolia. The fact that families such as Equidae (Atyra), Cervidae (Geyikgiller) and Greece, France and Spain with their peers are both time points out that the migrations seen along the corridor in this vast geography are realized through Anatolia. Burdur Elmacık fauna is the richest stop of Anatolia on this land corridor.