PETERSBURG, Ky. — The entrance gates here are topped with metallic Stegosauruses. The grounds include a giant tyrannosaur standing amid the trees, and a stone-lined lobby sports varied sauropods. It could be like any other natural history museum, luring families with the promise of immense fossils and dinosaur adventures. But step a little farther into the entrance hall, and you come upon a pastoral scene undreamt of by any natural history museum. Two prehistoric children play near a burbling waterfall, thoroughly at home in the natural world. Dinosaurs cavort nearby, their animatronic mechanisms turning them into alluring companions, their gaping mouths seeming not threatening, but almost welcoming, as an Apatosaurus munches on leaves a few yards away. What is this, then? A reproduction of a childhood fantasy in which dinosaurs are friends of inquisitive youngsters? The kind of fantasy that doesn’t care that human beings and these prefossilized thunder-lizards are usually thought to have been separated by millions of years? No, this really is meant to be more like one of those literal dioramas of the traditional natural history museum, an imagining of a real habitat, with plant life and landscape reproduced in meticulous detail. For here […]
Sunday, May 27th, 2007
Adam and Eve in the Land of the Dinosaurs
Author: EDWARD ROTHSTEIN
Source: The New York Times
Publication Date: 24-May-07
Link: Adam and Eve in the Land of the Dinosaurs
Source: The New York Times
Publication Date: 24-May-07
Link: Adam and Eve in the Land of the Dinosaurs
Stephan: I notice many of my fellow Americans often feel smug, you can see it in their faces, when they talk about how the Mesoamerican cultures could have slaughtered thousands in human sacrifices, how the Germans served in the Holocaust camps, or how some people believe in UFOs. They shouldn't. The sad truth is that if you say something often enough, with enough conviction, and all the right props, a certain number of people, including a certain number of Americans, will believe it and make it part of their values. Judgment is a luxury we have not earned.