Category: Travel

Behind the Scenes at the American Museum of Natural History

The American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) curates more than 33 million specimens. Yet, visitors only get to see a tiny fraction of these on display. Even the Fossil Halls, one of the largest museum exhibits in the world, contains just 600 or so of the museum’s finest specimens. These specimens may be the most beautiful and complete, but what about the millions of specimens behind the scenes?

Most visitors don’t realize that museums require huge storage space to curate many times the number of objects on display. These storage spaces may not appear exciting at first glance, but this is where paleobiologists learn the most about Earth’s past. Rows and rows of cabinets, shelving units, and crates contain the data that support scientific research. It’s critical that the collections are maintained so that if one scientist wants to check the reproducibility of another scientist’s work, the specimens are available for testing. When new specimens are added to the collection, we can test those specimens to see if previous conclusions still hold up. Then, scientists are able to use the same collections to test more questions and add to our knowledge.

This summer, I was given access to the AMNH collections for my oreodont research and got to see some of those specimens behind the scenes. Oreodonts are a diverse group of prehistoric herbivores found only in North America. It’s easy to remember their name if you like Oreo cookies. They exhibit different body forms at different times and survived for more than 30 million years. Some look like a pig, but others have traits that are cat-like or tapir-like. We now know they were most closely related to camels. Robert Bruce Horsfall’s reconstructions of what oreodonts may have looked like were published with Malcolm Rutherford Thorpe’s research in 1913. Thorpe and Horsfall looked at some of the same fossils I am using in my research.

Promerycochoerus carrikeri is pig-like (top), Eporeodon socialis is cat-like (bottom left), and Brachycrus laticeps is tapir-like (bottom right). Sketches by Robert Bruce Horsfall.

Though extinct today, oreodonts are the most common mammal fossils found in Eocene and Oligocene deposits. It’s hypothesized that there may be a connection between grassland expansion in the Miocene and their extinction seven million years ago. It is surprising that not even one of such an apparently diverse group survived while camelids, horses, and peccaries survived through the Miocene into the Pleistocene. I’m researching changes in oreodont body forms during grassland expansion to try to understand why oreodonts disappeared from the west-central Great Plains about eight million years ago. This research will help us understand more about extinction and which mammals species may be more at risk today.

The oreodont collections at the AMNH are extensive. There are 240 cabinets of fossils containing as many as 9 drawers of fossils in each cabinet. Specimens that are too large to be stored in the cabinets are cataloged on shelving units. The specimens are generally organized in the order they evolved (as understood at the time the specimens were added to the cabinets). So as I work through the collection, I get to observe oreodont morphology, oreodont body forms, at different snapshots in time. This type of research depends on large collections like this one. It’s an exciting place to be!

Wetland Transitions at Cay Creek Nature Preserve, Georgia

The Cay Creek Nature Preserve boardwalk invites visitors to observe ecological change between fresh water to intermediate water to brackish water environments. If you are traveling to Georgia, do not miss this little gem!

Top row progressing from fresh to transitional water environments (L-R). Middle row shows transitional environments. Bottom row progresses from less to more brackish water environments (L-R).

Portraits by Paula Peeters Inspire a New Perspective on Forests

A poor photograph of a spectacular specimen with six attached leaves. This specimen is one of thousands of botanical fossils curated at the MEF.

This summer, I enjoyed the good fortune of working with Ray Carpenter, a world-class paleopalynologist, while studying the Río Pichileufú collection curated at the Museo Paleontológico Egidio Feruglio (MEF) in Trelew, Argentina. Better known for discovering the largest dinosaur in the world, this fantastic museum curates some of the most significant (and beautiful) paleobotanical collections in the Southern Hemisphere. Working side-by-side with Ray in one of the museum’s labs, we often were so absorbed in our work that we spoke little. Yet, we often found time during lunch to share our interest in Earth’s changing environments. It’s funny how life works, I was sitting with Ray thousands of miles from home on the other side of the world, and there I learned about Paula Peeter’s, an ecological artist, who lives thousands of miles away in Australia.

A coloring page from Paula’s Bimblebox Wonderland.

Paula combined her Ph.D. in ecology with her talent and love of the arts to create an entirely new way of capturing and communicating the ecological stories that forests tell. Her ecologically accurate forest portraits, allow us to view the very different traits of individual forests just as we would when looking at portraits of people. I was captured by her artwork and perspective. Not only did I immediately purchase one of her prints, but I found a large portrait frame to display the work authentically. Every time I look at Paula’s print, I feel as if I recognize that gum tree forest, just as if it were a good friend. Thank you Paula!

 

One of a number of Paula’s educational cartoons. To see more of Paula’s ecological art and nature journaling, check out her site, Paperbark Writer.

 

The flooded gum forest portrait that is framed in my study and keeps me company as I work.

Paleobotany in Patagonia, Argentina

A labor of love. Anna Whitaker, undergraduate assistant from Penn State, on right, helps to catalogue some of the 1200+ specimens from Río Picheleufú.

After more than four weeks of investigating the Museo Paleontológico Bariloche Río Pichileufú collection at the Museo Paleontológico Egido Feruglio in Trelew Argentina, my husband and I explored the Iberá Wetlands in Corrientes Province, Argentina.

One of the many traditional roadside shrines to Gauchito Gil, a beloved Argentine folk saint who took from the rich to give to the poor.

A raptor’s welcome to the wetlands

Jorge, our guide to the wetlands, is the son of the first park ranger at Lagunas Ibera surrounding Colonia Carlos Pellegrini. It was an honor to learn from him in his family tradition.

During the day, the caiman are pretty relaxed and we were safe in the large rowboat. Things got much more interesting at dusk when we took out a small canoe to observe their evening activities.

life in Argentina’s wetlands…

Making sure to get back and check in with the Park Rangers as the sun sets.

Making sure to get back and check in with the Park Rangers as the sun sets.

A Geological Reward

After 6 days in the field doing intense stratigraphic field work in the Guadalupe Mountains Carbonate Platform, we were rewarded with a trip down into Carlsbad Caverns National Park. It was well worth the 72 floors down and back!

The entrance to the cave is massive. I was only disappointed we did not have time to stay for the bats emerging in the evening.

An exquisit artistic rendition of the bats.

Visitors are greeted with an artistic rendition of the bats and a reminder to help prevent the spread of white-nose syndrome. This disease is spreading quickly from the northeast and threatens all species of hibernating bats.

Stalactites stick tight to the ceiling and grow toward stalagmites on the cave floor.

The slow growth of calcite deposits creates awesome forms within the cave. Stalactites stick tight to the ceiling and grow toward stalagmites on the cave floor.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén

Skip to toolbar