November 17, 2008

A Review of the Natural History Museum’s Darwin Exhibit

While Observer writer, Robin McKie, teased readers with a purported review of the new Darwin Bicentennial exhibit at the Natural History Museum in London, her real intent seemed be another “save the species” (i.e, the planet) call for action.  

Of course, political correctness gone wild is not limited to pop science writers. The same issue of The Observer has another article by Robin McKie in which she notes evolutionist Steve Jones is upset with the Bank of England for allowing a hummingbird to be on a 10 pound note commemorating Darwin’s Galapagos Island studies. Hummingbirds do not exist in the Galapagos Islands and apparently Darwin never even discussed these birds in any of his writings!

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Looking the truth right in the eye
by Robin McKie
The Observer (UK), The Critics, p .11
November 16, 2008

Confronting visitors as they enter the Natural History Museum’s bicentennial tribute to Charles Darwin is a plinth with a plush purple cushion on top. Two pale-coloured mockingbirds rest there in elegant repose, their labelled claws pointing upwards. Caught by Darwin in the Galapagos in 1835, the birds – previously stored in the museum’s vaults – are being displayed in public for the first time.

These are no mere historical curios, however. Although at first glance they look similar, a closer examination reveals key differences. One bird – from the island of Floreana – is darker and has wing bands and a relatively large beak, features that surprised Darwin at the time. Until then, the young naturalist had thought all mockingbirds would be light-coloured like the second specimen (from San Cristóbal island) on the plinth. Such differences – in creatures supposedly from the same species – intrigued Darwin and set him thinking about how animals might change and then evolve into new creatures. ‘Such facts undermine the stability of species,’ he wrote of his mockingbirds in a notebook, also displayed here.

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November 14, 2008

Darwin’s Beard Hair on Display at British Natural History Museum

To understand a mockingbird: specimens that sparked Darwin’s theory of evolution
by Ian Sample Science correspondent
The Guardian, p. 3
November 14, 2008

The significance of the two birds lying side by side on a purple cushion with tags dangling from their feet is easy to miss. But the subtle differences — a strip of white on the wing, a smudge of dark on the breast — set Charles Darwin on course to develop the most important scientific theory ever conceived: the evolution of species through natural selection.

The mockingbirds are perhaps the most important specimens Darwin collected from the Galapagos during his five-year voyage aboard HMS Beagle in the 1830s, and today they go on show as part of a major exhibition at the Natural History Museum in London. It reveals Darwin as a tenacious scientist, a pragmatic lover, and a man pained by losing his religion.

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October 15, 2008

Ohio Colleges Mobilize To Celebrate Darwin


Colleges celebrate Darwin in yearlong slate of events
by Kevin Mayhood
The Columbus Dispatch, October 15, 2008
p. B3

Throughout Ohio, people can sup on primordial soup and listen to the strings of evolution as part of a celebration of Charles Darwin, a former divinity student who shook the world when he published his theory of evolution.

Darwin’s 200th birthday would be Feb. 12, and his On the Origin of Species will turn 150 on Nov. 24, 2009.

Cincinnati will host the North American Paleontological Convention in June, partly so that paleontologists can tour the Creation Museum in Petersburg, Ky.

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October 13, 2008

Answers in Genesis Creation Museum Still In News

The Northern Kentucky based Answers in Genesis Creation Museum continues to draw both crowds and publicity. The following article by Dylan Lovan (Associated Press) appeared in several papers across the United States: Miami Herald Sunday, The Anniston Star, Los Angeles Times, Salt Lake Tribune, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Pittsburgh Post Gazette, Winston-Salem Journal, Boston Herald, San Diego Union Tribune, and dozens of other media outlets.

Of course, the release of Bill Maher’s docudrama, Religulous, and subsequent media PR blitz, have added to the Creation Museum’s media exposure for October.


A year later, Creation Museum still claims big crowds
by Dylan T. Lovan
The Detroit News, p. C1 and C3.
13 Oct 2008

The museum exhibits are taken from the Old Testament, but the special effects are pureHollywood: a stateof-the-art planetarium, animatronics and a massive model of Noah’s Ark, all intended to explain the origins of the universe from a biblical viewpoint.

The Creation Museum, which teaches life’s beginnings through a literal interpretation of the Bible, is claiming attendance figures that would make it an unexpectedly strong draw less than a year and a half after it debuted. More than a half-million people have toured the Petersburg, Ky., attraction since its May 2007 opening, museum officials say.

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September 9, 2008

UK Tabloid, The Mail, Pokes At Creation Museum

In what started out as a travel article on Louisville, Kentucky and Cincinnati, Ohio for the UK tabloid, The Mail, writer Chris Coplans ends with a ‘hit’ piece on the Answers in Genesis Creation Museum. Excerpted below are some of his comments on his visit to the Creation Museum.


Stung like a bee by the Louisville Lip
by Chris Coplans
The Mail on Sunday (UK), September 7, 2008
p. 32-33

On my way back to the airport in Kentucky I made one last stop at God’s answer to Disneyworld, the Creation Museum.

Worried about being stereotyped as Stone Age, Bible-bashing hillbillies, Kentuckians have been reluctant to embrace their newest attraction. Not so the thousands of biblical literalists who make a pilgrimage from all over America to visit God’s own theme park.

ThE state-of-the-art 70,000 sq ft museum is just one exit away from the airport and presents itself as a ‘walk through history’, although it struck me as a walk through fantasy land. For just under £13, you can learn how God made the universe in six days, where the dinosaurs lived on Noah’s Ark and, most bizarrely, how Darwin was responsible for the Holocaust.

I was greeted outside the main building by a large, apparently harmless dinosaur. It turns out the likes of Steven Spielberg and 99 per cent of scientists have been giving dinosaurs an undeservedly bad Press.

One exhibit shows a young child happily frolicking with a couple of peace-loving, vegan dinosaurs, even though they had been extinct for 60 million years before humans came along. The Creation Museum, like Hollywood, doesn’t let science get in the way of a good story.

The museum is packed with hordes of jumbo-sized evangelical Christians, waddling around with their offspring, apparently defying the deadly sin of gluttony. Had Noah let them aboard, their excess weight would have sunk the Ark.

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