Saturday, 20 August 2011

Natural History Museum

An impressive facade
Dave with the lovely building
We visited the natural history museum the other weekend, this has got to be one of the big London attractions, especially considering it gets a place along Exhibition Road.

The building is certainly impressive and was actually built specifically for the purpose of housing the natural history specimens in the Bristish Museum.  It first opened in 1881, but some of the specimens go as far back as 1753.  In fact there are even things collected by Joseph Banks on his voyage with Captain Cook.

We didn't get to see the full collection, too many screaming kids, we'll have to go back in the middle of winter, but there were some real finds there.

There was a lot of things I'd never seen before; a mammoth's head, a full dinosaur skeleton in the main hall, fossils of early humans, sabre tooth cat and deep sea creatures were all on my hit list.



What are you doing there sheep? Plus two more mythical creatures
Things like the mammoth are so freaky you kind of think of them as mythical creatures, just because you've never seen one and they sound so outlandish.  So it was great to see one in the flesh, or bone as the case may be.

To the left are some more seriously strange animals, what's with the double set of tusks?  And literally that deer (or dik dik) would not have even come up to my knee. I'm not sure what the sheep was doing there, maybe it was hoping to bask in reflected glory.

The main hall, complete with dinosaur
Even the boring animals were interesting.  There was a great exhibit on camels.  For instance, did you know that if a double humped camel mates with a single humped camel then the offspring has one really long hump?  And that they can drink 135 litres of water in 15 minutes and then look majorly pregnant for a couple of hours as the water makes it's way into the tissues.

One thing I definitely have to go back for is the dinosaur exhibit.  They had one set up in the main hall and it was impressive.  Unfortunately that area was packed to the gills though so we were a bit hesitant.
The man : Joseph Banks
Faded snow leopard
We mainly focussed on the mammal exhibit.  When you first walk into the main room and look up there is a full scale model (?) of a blue whale.  I'm not sure if it was a model or a stuffed creature. I think it must have been a model, it was far too big, but then taxidermists are pretty skilled.

A lot of the animals were obviously stuffed a long time ago though, and their fur had started to really fade.  I guess it's no longer allowed to go out collecting rare animals just so you can kill them, stuff them and stick them in a museum.  So we have to make do with threadbare lions and faded snow leopards.

A 1500 year old sequoia
In fact there was one very sad looking chimpanzee skeleton which had been arranged to look very much like a little child.  The story attached to it was that it had been captured in the wild, but on the journey back to England it had an accident and had smashed it's jaw against the mast and subsequently died from it's injury.  You could see the damage to the skeleton on the left side of it's face.  It looked very forlon.

To the left is a section taken from a Californian redwood.  This thing was 1500 years old, it was incredible.  Apparently there aren't many left.  It must be amazing to see these in real life.

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