The Sant Ocean Hall at the Smithsonian Natural History Museum

I happened to make it on opening day to this exhibit. TGAW, my wonderful adventuring partner, came along with me, pointing out all the most interesting parts of the displays I was too busy taking photos of to notice. I’d been eagerly awaiting the exhibit’s opening since I caught the following enticing glimpse of it months back:


North Pacific Right Whale

North Pacific Right Whale
Eubalaena japonica
(Taken several months before the hall opened.)

The Sant Hall is an extremely modernized exhibit for the Smithsonian. It’s not a quiet, static display of old fossils, but a a dynamic, brightly-lit presentation, with videos projected along all the walls. One room presented a video globe showing continental drift, effects of tsunamis, and other features of Earth’s oceans. Neither TGAW nor I could figure out if the globe was animated with projectors on the outside or inside of it.


Leatherback Seaturtle (left) North Pacific Right Whale (right)

Leatherback Seaturtle (left) North Pacific Right Whale (right)

A presentation on whales, showing a progression of whale skeletons from their deer-like ancestor, to whales with legs, to our whales today makes one wonder how anyone can reject evolution. Even modern whales have hipbones, and older whales have a pair of tiny, apparently useless back legs.


Dorudon atrox

Dorudon atrox
(note the hind legs)

Trilobites! Trilobites! Trilobites! I had no idea there were such biodiversity within this species that, now extinct, was once one of the most populace species on Earth. No wonder flickr has a Trilobite group.


Trilobite

Trilobite
Asaphus kowalewskii

Sometimes I get so down into the effort of cataloging everything I see, I end up forgetting the forest around me. Without TGAW, I would’ve missed the absolute coolest part of the exhibit: the GIANT SQUID. Kept in a refrigerated tank, this enormous animal stretches almost the entire width of the exhibit.


Giant Squid

Giant Squid

It’s a fantastic modern exhibit, highly recommended. You can see the complete flickr set here.


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