Saturday, May 28, 2011

Natural History Museum

Natural History Museum, London


OVERVIEW - Originally part of the British Museum, the collection grew so large it required a separate identity. The museum features dinosaur skeletons, fossils, human biology, earth sciences, and the ever-popular Creepy Crawlies exhibit.
Natural History Museum
The front entry
HISTORY
To understand the foundation of the Natural History Museum we must go back to the early years of the 18th century. A prominent London physician named Sir Hans Sloane (1660-1753) made it his life's work to collect natural curiosities from across the world. Sloane's eccentric collection of oddments ran the gamut from plant and animal remains to archaeological artifacts and human skeletons. Sloane desired that his collection remain together at his death, and created a Board of Trustees to oversee its sale to the government for the bargain price of £20,000.
T Rex at the Natural History Museum
A robotic T Rex roars into life in the popular Dinosaur Exhibit
In 1756 Sloane's collection was housed in Montagu House, the first home of what was to become the British Museum. Over the next century the collection was expanded and added to by further bequests, most notably that of Sir Joseph Banks (see Kew Gardens). In 1856 the natural history department of the British Museum gained its first overseer, paleontologist Richard Owen. With the help of Prime Minister William Gladstone, Owen convinced the government that more space was essential to the functioning of the collection. Land was purchased in South Kensington, and a design competition was held for the new museum buildings. A design by Captain Robert Fowke was selected as the winning entry, though Fowke died in 1867 and the actual building was carried out by architect Alfred Waterhouse. After a great deal of squabbling between curators of the various collections within the new museum, the building in South Kensington finally opened to the public in 1881. Though it was separate in fact, it was not until 1963 that the Natural History Museum was established as a body independent of the British Museum. In 1986 the Geological Museum was merged with the NHM.
THE BUILDING
The museum building is as striking as the exhibits it contains. Designed by Fowke as a cathedral of science, the museum is entered through a set of doors flanked by columns modeled on those at Fingle's Cave in Scotland. The Romanesque style interior is supported on intricately carved and decorated columns. Terra-cotta has been used as a unifying decorative material, and everywhere there are carvings of beats and plants, both imaginary and real.
The Power Within t the Natural History Museum
"The Power Within" explores the forces that shape our earth
THE GALLERIES
The museum can be divided into several distinct areas; the Life Galleries, Earth Galleries, Wildlife Garden, and Temporary Exhibitions. Within the Life Galleries are displays dedicated to Dinosaurs, Ecology, Human Biology, Mammals, Primates, the Origin of Species, and Minerals. The Earth Galleries focus on the geological history of the earth and the solar system. Within this gallery are fascinating simulators enabling visitors to experience for themselves what it feels like to live through an earthquake or a volcanic eruption. Learn about plate tectonics and what influences climate.
Wildlife Garden
The Wildlife Garden
The Wildlife Gallery is a new one acre garden space on the west lawn of the museum, where different British habitats are recreated, including marsh, ponds, oak and bluebell woods, hedgerows and grass meadows.
The museum also presents an ongoing program of Temporary Exhibits with themes ranging from artwork depicting animals to Myths and Monsters, Predators, photographic competitions, and more.

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