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ROM looking for donations to unveil its Trout River blue whale skeleton exhibit

The blue whale carcass that kicked up a stink in a small Newfoundland town is nearly ready for exhibit at the Royal Ontario Museum.

Whale skeleton set to debut in spring 2017 in time for Canada's 150th birthday

The Royal Ontario Museum lugged the blue whale skeleton back to Ontario from Trout River in 2014, spending years cleaning it in the hopes of unveiling its skeleton in 2017. (Jacqueline Waters/Royal Ontario Museum 2014)

Canada's largest museum needs help to display the world's largest mammal.

This spring, Royal Ontario Museum plans to unveil itsTrout River, Newfoundland, blue whale skeleton,and it's already started fundraising for the much-anticipated exhibit.

Called Make a Splash,the ROM hopes to raise $100,000to help pay for the blockbuster exhibit.

"There was so much excitement around the whale right from day one," saidSusan Horvath, of the ROM's board of governors.

"We thought, 'We need to find a way people can get involved personally.'"

The bloated blue whale carcasswashed up inTrout River in April of 2014, causing local concern,a big stink and national headlines, onthe tiny community's waterfront.

The museum stepped in and de-fleshed the whale and transported its bones back to Ontario to begin the process of preserving the skeleton with the idea to display it in time for Canada's150th anniversary.

The bones were partly cleaned through a composting process to get rid of oils and residues. (Justine DiCesare/ROM)

Your name here

Horvath said with a donation of $40, people will have their name added to an artistic display in the museum.

"Your name will be put on a beautiful image of a whale as recognition. We see people puttingall three kids' names on the whale, so it's terrific," she said.

The graphic will be in the main lobby of the ROM for the duration of the six-monthexhibit, and Horvath hopes it willact as asneak peek of what they'll see inside.

"It's a fantastic intro for people to come in and see the real whale."

Donors names' will be displayed inside the lobby of the Royal Ontario Museum. (JP Moczulski/Reuters)

The Trout River whale will remainin the ROM's permanent collection and Horvath saidparts of it will continueto be displayed in the future.

You can make a donation to the ROM by visiting its website.

In the meantime, the whale bones are being de-greased before they can be reassembled and displayed. Horvath hopes the exhibit will be ready for March 2017.

"There's a lot of work still to be done," she said.

With files from The Corner Brook Morning Show