Τετάρτη 6 Ιουλίου 2011

What`s Ida...in NHM

The Natural History Museum at the University of Oslo is Norway’s most comprehensible natural history collection. For almost 200 years, preserved plant specimens, animal specimens, rocks, minerals and fossils have been collected, studied and preserved here.

A selection of specimens are on display for the general public, in the Geological Museum and the Zoological Museum. Both are to be found in the beautiful Botanical Garden. Located at Tøyen in the east of Oslo city centre, the garden is not only popular for recreation, but is a scientific collection in itself.

Ida is the world’s oldest complete primate skeleton, and the most valuable object exhibited at The Natural History Museum of Oslo. She was bought by the museum in 2007, and presented to the world in 2009.

Ida fascinates us in several ways:

•The dramatic story about the unfortunate little girl, still with her milk teeth, who had a broken wrist, was poisoned, fell in the water, and drowned.
•The superb state of preservation of the fossil
•What the fossil can tell us about the evolutionary history of mankind
•The secrecy surrounding the fossil from the time it was found in 1983 until it became publicly known
•The meticulously planned launch, with a book, a made-for-TV documentary, a website, huge press conferences and correspondingly great media coverage
•The ensuing debate around the popularization of research
Through the summer of 2010, Ida can be seen as part of the exhibition ”Can We Forgive Darwin?” After that, she will be included in the museum’s permanent exhibitions....

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