Cristián Samper on Appreciating Evolution
The director of the Natural History Museum discusses why understanding evolution is so critical
- By Laura Helmuth
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2012, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
A lot of what our paleontologists are focusing on right now is understanding those periods of rapid transition and understanding what triggered them and how the various groups of organisms lived.
A third example, which was a very special experience for me, is work in the field of human origins in Kenya by Rick Potts. My wife and I had a chance to go see the site about six years ago. It was wonderful to walk through that landscape in Olorgesailie with Rick and actually start reading the evidence. And it’s not just the human tools, it’s the entire landscape, the entire community that was there. You start finding teeth of zebras that have gone extinct and hippopotamus and other animals, and you suddenly realize that this entire landscape was really changing over time, from wet areas to dry areas, through a lot of environmental changes. And those changes were triggering a huge amount of variation and extinction and adaptation in all kinds of organisms—including early humans, but not only early humans. You can walk through a sequence that covers about one million years in a day. Going through there with someone who knows how to read that and interpret that, having a wonderful storyteller, is a journey back in time.
What destination did we miss in our evotourism package?
You should definitely include Hawaii at some point. We do a huge amount of research in the Hawaiian Islands and it’s amazing the data that’s coming out. You can really see evolution in action, probably even better than on the Galápagos Islands. Genetics has always been known for research on Drosophila and other organisms, but we’re getting a lot of interesting genetic research on the honeycreeper birds. You can go and see colorful birds like the Iiwi, and some of them are going extinct. Plus it happens to be a great tourist destination anyway, and you can see volcanoes in action. What was so striking to me in Hawaii was that everything comes together in that microcosm.
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Comments (1)
Wonderful seeing "Evotourism" promoted -- but even more important is conveying the sense that families and kids can find special sites to remember and marvel at our shared Immense Journey near their own homes. That was my intent 10 years ago in initiating a "Sacred Sites of the Epic of Evolution" webpage. Google it and see for yourself. I would love to have homeschool kids contribute photo-essays of their own to this page. Here is how I define this topic:
"Sacred Sites of evolution are places that are locally, regionally, nationally, or globally significant for commemorating an event in the Great Story of cosmic, geological, biological, or cultural evolution."
Posted by Connie Barlow on January 17,2012 | 10:57 AM