From Mollusks to Mastodons, Enjoy This Out-of
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From Mollusks to Mastodons, Enjoy This Out-of
Thursday, April 19, 2012 MICHIGAN K.I.D.S. | WWW.DNIE.COM From Mollusks to Mastodons, Enjoy This Out-of-This World Exhibit H ave you had your Vitamin W lately? It’s a lot like Vitamin Z, the make-believe “Vitamin Zoo” we wrote about in our last Detroit Zoo story. “Vitamin Wonder” is an energy booster, too. We made it up to describe the astonishment and curiosity we always feel at the best museum shows. We were barely past the entrance when we felt it once again at “Life on Earth!,” a new show at the Cranbrook Institute of Science, in Bloomfield Hills. “See that giant White Rhino?” asked John Zawiskie, pointing to a massive head mounted on a wall. It was the very first thing we saw. “That’s real. See that Bengal Tiger? That’s real. The lion coming out of the wall is real. The monkeys – they’re all the real thing.” What an incredible display! John, who is both a paleontologist and a geologist, or a fossil and a rock scientist, scoured the institute’s vast natural history collection to put together the show. He also tapped a little-known treasure trove: Wayne State University’s natural history collection, which hasn’t been open to the public in quite a few years. Using specimens from both institutions, John was able to assemble the show’s truly spectacular “Wall of Life.” Twenty-eight animal groups are represented, including mammals, reptiles, amphibians, fish and birds. “The idea was to focus on the concept of the diversity of life – biodiversity,” John said. Many of the specimens were so life-like we halfThis shell is the most beautiful we’ve ever seen. The extinct mollusk lived 70 million expected them to roar or years ago. It’s fossil remains were found in cheep or croak. Three were the Canadian Rockies. of extinct species, which made seeing them all the more wondrous. One was the Carolina Parakeet, the only parakeet native to North America, though no longer. The mollusk collection was a knockout. Mollusks include snails, clams and mussels, and hundreds of shiny shells were displayed. If you think a clam is a clam is a clam, think again. Each species’ shell was unique, proving once again that many of the world’s most beautiful shapes are found in Nature. The show also explores Earth’s five mass extinctions, or periods when thousands of species disappeared. After each extinction, new species evolved, eventually including Homo sapiens (that’s us). Photos by Per Kjeldsen How many species can you identify in the exhibit’s Wall of Life? Can you spot the armadillo? Still, more than 99 percent of all the species that ever lived on Earth are gone. That includes the American Mastodon, a prehistoric elephant that once roamed Michigan. Don’t believe us? There’s an enormous mastodon skull in the show. “It was found in 1934 right across the street from the museum,” said John, “at the corner of Woodward at Charing Cross Road.” The show runs through Sept. 2. For more, visit http://science. cranbrook.edu. By Patricia Chargot It’s hard to believe this Bengal Tiger isn’t alive. It’s just one of the many well preserved life forms in Cranbrook’s “Life on Earth” show. The Earth’s first five extinctions occurred long before human beings existed. They were triggered by a variety of factors, including lava eruptions and global warming. Scientists believe a sixth mass extinction may be underway, this one caused by humans – the over-fishing, over-hunting and over-development of the planet. 3