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Monday, April 21, 2008 | Reason : Evolution and Biology | print version Print | Comments

Document Evolution exhibit shows why nobody's perfect

by MSNBC

Thanks to Dustin Ambler for the link.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/24201725/

Evolution exhibit shows why nobody's perfect
'Surviving: The Body of Evidence' displayed at University of Pennsylvania


By Joann Loviglio

PHILADELPHIA - A new exhibit at the University of Pennsylvania about human evolution gives a new meaning to the expression "nobody's perfect."

Scientists say we have evolution to thank for our survival, but that it's also where we can point the finger when we experience backaches, impacted wisdom teeth or difficulty giving birth.

The remarkable yet imperfect process that has brought homo sapiens to where we are now, and where it might take us down the road, is the theme of "Surviving: The Body of Evidence," at the Penn Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.

An exhibit five years in the making, it uses fossils and interactive multimedia displays to tell the story about how the human race adapted, thrived and continues to evolve. It leaves Penn in May 2009 for a multi-city tour including stops at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History and The Health Museum in Houston.

The exhibit's message, right down to the title, is that finding evidence of the evolutionary process is as simple as looking at ourselves.

"You are a living artifact of evolution," said Janet Monge, co-curator of the exhibit. "We didn't want it to be something remote. It's about you — you're the artifact and this will tell you why."

Visitors can stand toe-to-toe with a skeleton cast of 3.2 million-year-old "Lucy," one of the world's most famous fossils, and children can see how they measure up to Nariokotome Boy, a nearly complete skeleton discovered in Kenya of a child who lived 1.6 million years ago.

Also included are more than 100 touchable casts of fossil bones and skulls from the evolutionary history of primates and humans.

The show is more focused on concepts rather than artifacts, however, and is replete with child-friendly interactive elements such as peek holes, sliding panels and video monitors.

A 16-foot-long figure of a woman with transparent plastic skin, nicknamed "JaMo" in honor of Monge, is the centerpiece of the show. Stationed around the recumbent figure will be interactive display screens using animation and 3-D graphics illustrating how and why our muscles, bones and joints evolved and their complex interplay that allows us a wide range of movement.

The exhibit also highlights what might be considered evolution's hiccups: the imperfect results of the evolutionary process common to people around the world, such as stiff backs and pelvic bones that haven't adapted to the larger brain size of newborns, making childbirth difficult for many women.

"The important aspect we tried to capture ... is evolution isn't just an interesting scientific idea," said Alan Mann, exhibit co-curator. "We wanted to let everybody know what it means to be a product of evolution."

The show also provides an unequivocally scientific message about what remains a topic of debate in some places more than 80 years after the Scopes monkey trial.

Even as understanding is growing exponentially because of advances in genetics and biology, "many Americans don't understand evolution, they mistrust it, they don't get it," said Andrew Binns, Penn associate provost for education. That's why exhibits like "Surviving" are so important as educational tools for children and adults, he said.

It's also a stepping off point for a citywide "Year of Evolution" sponsored by Penn and featuring additional events at The Academy of Natural Sciences, the Philadelphia Zoo, The Franklin Institute, the American Philosophical Society Museum and the Mutter Museum of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia.

Timed to coincide with the approach of Charles Darwin's 200th birthday and the 150th anniversary of his seminal work "On the Origin of Species," both happening in 2009, programs will include exhibits and lectures on Darwin and geneticist Gregor Mendel, IMAX movies, and other events for children and families.

Comments 1 - 12 of 12 |

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1. Comment #165165 by VanYoungman on April 21, 2008 at 6:47 am

 avatarThe exhibition is excellent. For those of you visiting our fair city, I couldn't recommend it more highly.

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2. Comment #165170 by j.mills on April 21, 2008 at 7:04 am

 avatarDoesn't Philadelphia mean 'city of brotherly love'? Kind of appropriate for an exhibition of our ancestry. Tell me when it reaches Accrington. :)

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3. Comment #165189 by Barry Pearson on April 21, 2008 at 7:36 am

 avatar
Timed to coincide with the approach of Charles Darwin's 200th birthday and the 150th anniversary of his seminal work "On the Origin of Species," both happening in 2009.

2009 may be the year when "evolution strikes back"! (I hope).

Is there anywhere a comprehensive list of Darwin events across the world? Here are some links, but I doubt if they tell the full story:
http://www.yearofevolution.org/yoe.shtml
http://www.thebeagleproject.com/links.html
http://www.darwin2009.cam.ac.uk/
http://www.darwin200.org/
http://darwin-online.org.uk/2009.html

Other Comments by Barry Pearson

4. Comment #165208 by logicalbasedreality on April 21, 2008 at 8:07 am

 avatar"Even as understanding is growing exponentially because of advances in genetics and biology, "many Americans don't understand evolution, they mistrust it, they don't get it," said Andrew Binns, Penn associate provost for education."

this, unfortunately is what I run into alot when discussing evolution. The outright mistrust and lack of understanding. I once again had the misfortune of discussing evolution with a person who "knew" darwin stated we came from "rocks and monkeys" and that was why he thought it was crap. When asked to present this from Darwin's statements, he simply resorted to a feeble, verbal attack at me telling me he pitied me for being duped. LOL.

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5. Comment #165217 by Geoff on April 21, 2008 at 8:26 am

 avatarI'd love to see that! Any chance of a UK tour?

Other Comments by Geoff

6. Comment #165303 by bluebird on April 21, 2008 at 10:09 am

 avatarWow, looks great! This will be a fantastic field trip opportunity for schools.
Hope this exhibit journeys to our city!


Their website is kinda cool:
http://www.survivingexhibit.org/

Other Comments by bluebird

7. Comment #165446 by Lucas on April 21, 2008 at 1:35 pm

 avatarWell, if the number of people that go to this exhibit trumps the number that go to that blasted creation museum, I guess that means we're winning.

Other Comments by Lucas

8. Comment #165460 by KingMerv00 on April 21, 2008 at 1:45 pm

Wait...I live within 20 minutes of Philly.

I guess that would make me stupid not to go?

Other Comments by KingMerv00

9. Comment #165501 by Mitchell Gilks on April 21, 2008 at 2:26 pm

 avatarCool beans! Although we all know that this is a plan constructed by Satan to destroy life liberty, and the american way. Everyone know that if we evolved from monkeys, then killing infants, and raping women is perfectly ok.

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10. Comment #165509 by Johnny O on April 21, 2008 at 2:35 pm

 avatarThis sounds amazing. I hope there are events like this in Britain too, to celebrate "The Year of Evolution"

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11. Comment #165642 by Vaal on April 22, 2008 at 1:05 am

 avatarYep, that would be great to see in the UK. Richard, any chance of having a word in somebody's ear here at the Natural history museum to get somebody to promote it.

I would LOVE to see the Lucy skeleton and wouldn't it be great to be able to get hold of the Homo Erectus skeleton of the Turkana boy, although I can't see Kenya releasing it for tour. Maybe a replica?

Of course, we could get a replica of a Homo Robertson skeleton otherwise known as Homo inanity, Homo diarrhoea or Homo Ostrich. Anybody else got any suitable names? Don't know if you could get its head through the door though?

Other Comments by Vaal

12. Comment #169771 by comet halley on April 26, 2008 at 6:08 pm

Humans are not perfect!

Where is the Supernatural DESIGN?

It's that simple.

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