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Smithsonian Museum opens new window on human origins
Rosanne Skirble | Washington, DC 02 April 2010
Photo: Chip Clark, Jim DiLoreto, & Don Hurlbert, Smithsonian Institution
Five fossil human skulls2 show how the shape of the face and braincase of early humans changed over the past 2.5 million years.
Related Links:
National Museum of Natural History
David H. Koch Hall of Human Origins
Musee de l'Homme, Paris
The Origin of Species
Understanding Climate's Influence on Human Evolution, National Research Council
When you peel away the obvious outside differences, it turns out people and bananas have a lot in common.
Humans and banana trees are 60 percent genetically3 similar. We're even closer to chickens, sharing 75 percent of our DNA4 with the poultry5. But chimpanzees are our closest cousins, matching more than 98 percent of our DNA.
These are just some of the fascinating facts unveiled in the National Museum of Natural History's newest exhibit: The Hall of Human Origins, which explores that age-old question: "What does it mean to be human?"
The National Museum of Natural History in Washington is marking its 100th anniversary by welcoming hundreds of visitors to the exhibit.
Early man
Visitors enter through a time-tunnel depicting6 faces of modern and early human, or "hominid" species. Nearby Curator Rick Potts stands at a display case that holds 76 hominid skull1 replicas7, among the oldest known from six continents.
Seventy-six skulls on the human family tree at the David H. Koch Hall of Human Origins at the Smithsonian Institution.
He says all of the species are gone. "Their ways of life are now no longer on earth. And we are the only ones left of a diverse family tree."
The more than 300 fossils and other artifacts in the exhibit illustrate8 a rich mosaic9 of physical and behavioral traits that evolved over time. Visitors learn about milestones10 along that journey: when humans stood upright, when brains became large, when social lives became complex, and when speech was initiated11.
They peer into the eyes of life-like replicas of early humans, sit down at their ancestral hearth12 and walk in footprints molded from those left 3.6 million years ago in Tanzania.
"Those footprints are exactly at the spacing and the size of the footprints where three individuals walked across an African plain that long ago," Potts says.
Origin of mankind
Also on display are two historic human fossils. One is the 28,000 year-old skull of a Cro-Magnon - the first modern humans in Europe. The other is the skull of a Neanderthal, a species of hominid that co-existed with Cro-Magnon until they disappeared about 30,000 years ago. Both skulls are on loan from the Musee de l'Homme in Paris.
Alain Froment, curator of anthropology13 collections at the Musee de l' Homme in Paris, with the braincase of a Cro-Magnon, reconstructed in minute detail from a computer scan of the 28,000-year-old skull.
Alain Froment, who curates that museum's anthropology collection, says the fossils were discovered in France around the same time that Charles Darwin published his famous, "Origin of Species," in 1859. "It fueled the debate on the origin of mankind and the surprise was to find such a modern human in the fossil context with extinct animals."
Visitors are drawn14 to touch the ancestral replicas, to transform an image of their face into an early-human version and to interact with dioramas that convey the science of evolution, Potts says.
"What we've done in this hall is to allow people to explore the fossils from three points in time and touch the evidence. That activates15 a conversation with a scientist and ultimately activates, when you put all the clues together, an animated16 portrayal17 of a day in the life of early humans at three points in time."
Starting with a cast skull, artist John Gurche builds layers of muscle, fat, and skin to create hyper-realistic busts18 of human ancestors.
Adapting to a changing world
This six-million-year-old story unfolds during an era of dramatic climate change, according to curator Rick Potts. He says the exhibit shows how, during great swings between warm and cool, and moist and dry, humans adapted to a changing world.
"Not only adapted to an African savannah or how Neanderthals became adapted to an ice age, but rather how our ability to make tools, our ability to have an expanded and complex brain, even our ability to use symbols and speak to one another, are not just adaptations to a past ancestral environment, but an adaptation to being flexible, to being adaptable19."
That is a lesson 5th grade teacher Neisha Speights-Burno hopes to communicate to her students in Dumfries, Virginia. "For them to see the different skulls and tools," she says, "gives them more of a first-hand account that this stuff really did exist."
Some cave paintings were likely made as shown, by mixing pigment20 with saliva21 inside the mouth and blowing the mixture onto a cave wall.
And it's a sense of connection that resonates with Charla Weiswurm from San Antonio, Texas. "I think that with all the conflict with everyone in the world that you come back saying, 'we all came from the same place originally, and why can't we just all get along because we are all exactly alike.' Why did we have to have such differences in everything?"
Curator Rick Potts hopes the exhibit helps answer that question by showing that our ancient relatives - once-living and breathing individuals - are worth getting to know.
And in knowing them, he adds, they can teach us what it means to be human.
1 skull | |
n.头骨;颅骨 | |
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2 skulls | |
颅骨( skull的名词复数 ); 脑袋; 脑子; 脑瓜 | |
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3 genetically | |
adv.遗传上 | |
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4 DNA | |
(缩)deoxyribonucleic acid 脱氧核糖核酸 | |
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5 poultry | |
n.家禽,禽肉 | |
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6 depicting | |
描绘,描画( depict的现在分词 ); 描述 | |
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7 replicas | |
n.复制品( replica的名词复数 ) | |
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8 illustrate | |
v.举例说明,阐明;图解,加插图 | |
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9 mosaic | |
n./adj.镶嵌细工的,镶嵌工艺品的,嵌花式的 | |
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10 milestones | |
n.重要事件( milestone的名词复数 );重要阶段;转折点;里程碑 | |
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11 initiated | |
n. 创始人 adj. 新加入的 vt. 开始,创始,启蒙,介绍加入 | |
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12 hearth | |
n.壁炉炉床,壁炉地面 | |
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13 anthropology | |
n.人类学 | |
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14 drawn | |
v.拖,拉,拔出;adj.憔悴的,紧张的 | |
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15 activates | |
使活动,起动,触发( activate的第三人称单数 ) | |
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16 animated | |
adj.生气勃勃的,活跃的,愉快的 | |
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17 portrayal | |
n.饰演;描画 | |
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18 busts | |
半身雕塑像( bust的名词复数 ); 妇女的胸部; 胸围; 突击搜捕 | |
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19 adaptable | |
adj.能适应的,适应性强的,可改编的 | |
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20 pigment | |
n.天然色素,干粉颜料 | |
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21 saliva | |
n.唾液,口水 | |
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