Thursday, February 1, 2024

John Blackshoe Sends: Serendipity Natural History

A museum visit, beyond my ken. Humbling, it was. 

I love museums, and have visited many more than most people. Mostly history, art or technology focused. Because I am really interested in history, art and technology. As Dirty Harry said, “A man’s got to know his limits.”

We recently had some guests for several days, and on a whim decided to go visit the huge Natural History Museum of Utah. There was a special exhibit on Jane Goodall, the Brit lady who spent most of her life living amongst African chimpanzees and figuring out how they behave. A reasonably understandable objective, and I even read one of her early books, back when everyone else was reading it. The exhibit (by National Geographic) was really well done with all the latest multi-media technology. Living with monkeys is not my bag, and frankly seems a bit weird, but it was a fun exhibit.

Jane Goodall in Africa.
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But, wait, there’s more!

Rocks and minerals. Lots of pretty rocks and minerals, gems and crystals, precious stones, geodes and all that. Pretty to look at. Not intimidating at all.

Pretty rocks.
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And the bones. A big freaking room with warehouse shelving loaded with pallets of bones, some encased in plaster as received from the paleontologist digs, awaiting cleaning and removal of the overburden from a few centuries or millennia so that scientists can discover what’s there. Cool. These folks can be a bit eccentric and obsessive, but hey, it’s science.
 
Bone storage- the racks ride on tracks to fit many more into the room.
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Some folks go to work every day and pick dirt off old bones. And love their job(?)
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That is of course, related to Fred Flintstone’s man cave trophy room with the mounted skeletal heads of more than a dozen dinosaurs along a fifty foot wall. Actually, probably resin casts from the originals which weigh a LOT. Dang those things are BIG!

Fred Flintstone’s trophy wall.
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Now, as a kid (shortly after these critters went extinct) I was probably as fascinated by dinosaurs as the other kids, but lost interest and dinos had not pinged my radar again. Now, confronted by the full skeletal remains of dozens of the huge critters, I was only able to recognize the names of T-Rex and our home town favorite the Utahraptor, the largest of all raptors, which could kick T-rex’s butt. (“Utahraptor is a genus of large dromaeosaurid dinosaur that lived during the Early Cretaceous period from around 135 to 130 million years ago in what is now the United States. Weight up to 2200 pounds and up to 23 feet long.- according to Wikipedia). I was glad no little kids were there asking me questions.

But, here is the guy who knows the questions, and the answers, in a short 2:30 video:

Click here to watch the video.
Well, besides the loot from the dinosaur grave robbers, the Museum has a great section with artifacts of the really, really early Americans of the west. People who lived without the internet, electric vehicles, grocery stores, central heat in the winter or air conditioning in the summer. Their baskets were recognizable as having modern descendants. Fashions were limited, with rabbit skins and feathers woven for winter attire. My wife was dismayed at the thought of people having such a limited foot wear selection of colors or styles. Some were vegetarian, which was Indian for “poor hunter” but some chased down critters for chow. Even then, they had sharp and pointy stuff to kill game, or each other as they feuded over water or hunting grounds. Some were artistically inclined, and made decorative objects for personal wear, or perhaps religious symbolism, and some also made graffiti which is now revered as “rock art” or petroglyphs. Okay, this was not my type of “history” but pre-historic stuff is close enough I was comfortable with that. Here are some shoes, roughly 800-1000 years old.

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Wandering into the next section, they got all geologic, with igneous, sedimentary and layers and eras with names I can neither spell, pronounce nor remember, but they were a really long time ago. It was enough to make me roll on the floor laughing hysterically at the thought of “man made climate change” being some sort of disruptor of The Creator’s evolutionary cycle with millions of years of evidence that the earth has been hot or cold, and areas once seabed are now dusty desert, but some dude with a gas lawn mower made it stop raining. I refrained from inappropriate levity, but inwardly chuckled at all the “experts” who clearly are seduced by the religious climate cult, not science. All that geology included a warning that when the tectonic plates go moving around, there will be earthquakes, even if a few hundred years apart. Looking at the calendar on your smart phone, you can see that many areas of the U.S. are overdue for a big shakeout, unless global warming does not kill us all first.

Some Utah rock layers.
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Another section was devoted to humans, like you and me! Well, they insist we are all really not quite the same, and got into all sort of hereditary and DNA related science. Now, the level of anatomy is something we can all grasp, but when that gets broken down to the cellular level, I just don’t get it. 

The exhibits were well done (I guess) on biology, cellular biology, Genetics, genomes, DNA and the like. I confess (again) that I know absolutely nothing at all about this, other than a vague notion it is sort of a road map of all the bits and pieces of the cells and therefore the body, and is used for things related to cancer research and treatments. Sorry, but this history major is totally lost in the outer fringes of scientific knowledge. I’m glad, even grateful, that some people find it fascinating and pursue it with vigor, and that they find miraculous ways to make our bodies work better or longer.

 (They have separate sections we did not have time to see which show contemporary Native American tribal culture, a botanical section on plants, and probably other stuff which will be new, if my wounded dignity recovers enough for a return visit.) 

So, yes, it was a fun and very educational visit, covering a much wider range of subjects than I expected. But, dang, it made me feel like I should be wearing a dunce cap and sent to the corner to read a book or something.

In my dotage, I can come back here to Sarge’s place among friends, comfortable in knowing my historical limits. I’m quite content to let others explore their areas of interest. I admire, even respect what others choose to do, But, as for me getting involved in some of that stuff any deeper than I have already seen, Rhett’s response to Miss Scarlett is fitting, because “Frankly, my dear, I don’t give a damn.”




8 comments:

  1. Way back, when I was a budding student thinking about majoring in Geology we had a long field trip into the Great Mojave Desert. One of the stops was Cadiz Dry Lake. Breaking open a chunk of rock and exposing to light something that hadn't seen the light of day for neigh-on to half a billion years is awful (original sense, as in St. Paul's Cathedral in London is "amusing, awful, and artificial.") and humbling. And picking the dirt off of bones is often delicate work. Tink (or even think) of trying to get all the soft tissue off of the bones in a chicken wing tip without disturbing the bones,

    Lovely description. Thank you.

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  2. A most edifying post!

    Thank you, JB, for furthering my education. (What's not to love about a post with dinosaurs?)

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  3. Fellow History Major here, Brother; I can appreciate the appreciation of others who toil in other fields. I have enough of the sciences to get me through daily living with a healthy scepticism of the "experts" touted by our would-be masters. I've now lived through fifty years of " scientific" alarmism, none of which has even remotely come true.
    My Liberal Arts education - when such was actually common - provided me with a reasonable foundation and some subsequent study of things required for professional growth added to "scientific" education. Forays into "why is that?" as I live added additional layers, but I'll never be a " scientist" and I'm OK -even happy - with that.
    Thanks for an interesting " side-trip"!
    Boat Guy

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  4. Thanks for the quick tour of Utah history JB, think I spotted an early model Nike there......... :)

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  5. BYW, you can also just click on the picture from the video to launch the video. I included the text link below the picture just in case.Both methods work. (I knew I could do it with YT videos, wasn't sure about Vimeo, good to know.)

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  6. Museums often hold surprises. As an example, Sterling, CO museum has a wing devoted to rural electrification. Well done, highlighting the profound effect on the lives on rural residents.

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  7. Like Joe Lovel said, there is an awful reverent feeling seeing the deep past for oneself. At work, I would be invited to go on (for a week or so that I took leave as my vacation) with a paleo prof that was a friend, along with his students, to places around Jordan, MT that nobody goes and few people but the local ranchers ever see. Not a tourist excursion - camping next to the vehicles, daytime temps in the 90s with no shade. One trip, he stopped at an unassuming hillock in a pasture (occupied by two curious bulls). He pointed out a thin layer of ash below the distinctive "Z" coal bed". This is the K-T boundary". That was 65 million years ago when all life on Earth drastically changed.

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  8. How very cool!! When (if) I ever get to Utah, I will have to be sure to go and check it out. What folks can figure out from DNA and other bits and pieces is something I find interesting, but couldn't imagine doing myself. That botany wing sounds kinda interesting. While it is certainly much easier to pop a couple of Tylenol for my aches and pains, I find it fascinating to see what plants were used by our ancestors to treat common aliments that we all still get.
    Can you imagine someone asking "what do you do for a living"..."I pick dirt and plaster off old bones"...guess it's one of those things that ya really have to love to do.

    Suz

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