Tuesday, June 30, 2009
What happens when 70 paleontologist pay a visit to the Creationist Museum?
Some of the paleontologists paid a visit to this museum. Here's a link to a great article in the New York Times about their visit: "Paleontologist and Creationist Meet but Don't Mesh".
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Front Page News!

John Gurche, PRI's artist in residence, is featured in this weeks Ithaca Times and he even made the cover! It's a really great article all about the work he's doing in his studio at the Museum. Be sure to check out the article here: www.ithacatimes.com.
John is nearing completion on this project so be sure to get to the Museum to see these sculptures!
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
We're having a party!

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Opening Reception
Friday, June 26
6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Museum of the Earth's Borg Warner Gallery
Tickets $10
Join us for a delightful evening "picnic" in the forest as we explore our summer exhibit, A Forest Journey, generously supported by the Tompkins Trust Company and Tompkins County Tourism Grants. Socialize with friends, learn more about our exhibit, and enjoy delicious tidbits and local wine from King Ferry Winery. The perfect way to start out the weekend! Purchase your tickets by calling 607.273.6623 x11 or by ordering online: Museum of the Earth!
Monday, June 22, 2009
A Forest Journey at Museum of the Earth
Beginning June 20th the Paleontological Research Institution (PRI) and its Museum of the Earth will host the Franklin Institute Science Museum's traveling exhibition, "A Forest Journey". This interactive exhibition explores the role of trees in peoples' everyday lives while examining the environmental impact of society on forests. The exhibition focuses on exploring the use of wood throughout the history of civilization including paper products and pharmaceuticals, the relationship between forest, trees, and people as well as the effects of deforestation.
"A Forest Journey" focuses on creating a holistic understanding of the environment, science, and society. Interactive stations provide information about a wide range of topics such as tree life cycles and processes, habitats, conservation, the green house effect, products, and society. It explores the use of wood throughout the history of civilization including paper products and pharmaceuticals, the relationship between forests, trees, and people as well as the effects of deforestation to combine science and history in making connections between the past, present, and future.
"One of the core principals we try to convey here at Museum of the Earth is our responsibility to the Earth, as stewards of a precious resource" stated Dr. Sarah Chicone, director of exhibits. "We tell this story through our permanent exhibits, through our outreach activities, and through the traveling exhibitions we bring to our visitors. A Forest Journey is a very hands experience that promises to be fun for people of all ages. In addition to A Forest Journey, a series of regionally inspired wooden sculptures by local artist June Szabo will also be on display in our Borg Warner Gallery. This exhibition along with June's artwork is not to be missed."
Museum of the Earth will be hosting its opening reception on Friday, June 26 from 6-8 pm and tickets are $10. Its family opening will be held on Saturday, July 4th. Bring your children and join the Museum in celebrating Independence Day with our "Red, White, and Green" family day filled with fun activities regular admission is charged for this event, and as always members are free!
This exhibition is generously sponsored by Tompkins Trust Company and the Tompkins County Tourism Grants. "A Forest Journey" will be on display from June 20, 2009 - September 20, 2009 in the Museum's Borg Warner Gallery. Museum of the Earth is open Monday - Saturday from 10:00 am until 5:00 pm, and on Sunday from 11:00 am - 5:00 pm. For more information about rates and special events please visit us on the web at www.museumoftheearth.org.
Friday, June 19, 2009
Who We Are: Danielle Jenkins
Danielle is an intern in the Marketing Department at the Paleontological Research Institution. She is originally from Albany, New York and is a senior at Ithaca College. Danielle is studying Integrated Marketing Communications and chose to intern at PRI in order to gain more hands on experience for her major. As an intern, Danielle is working on press for the museum’s newest exhibit, A Forest Journey. Meet Danielle:
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Fossil of the Week

A belemnoid, or belemnite, is a extinct type of cephalopod related to squid and cuttlefish. Like the latter, belemnoids had an internal shell made of aragonite (a form of calcium carbonate) and much smaller than the animal, an ink sack, and preyed on fish and other small marine animals, but they had 10 arms with small hooks and no tentacles (instead of 8 arms and 2 tentacles of squid). Most belemnoids were about the size of present-day squid, 12 to 20 inches long. Belemnoids thrived in the ocean from the Early Devonian Period (400 million years ago) through the Cretaceous Period (66 million years ago). They were apparently a favorite food of ichthyosaurs, whose fossilized stomachs often contain belemnoid hooks and shells. The last belemnoids disappeared during the Eocene Epoch, which ended 34 million years ago. The internal shell was usually straight, but was loosely coiled in some species. The shell served for support, muscle attachment, and for buoyancy, similar to the gas-filled shell of the modern Chambered Nautilus. The word "belemnoid" comes from the Greek word belmnon meaning "a dart or arrow" and the Greek word eidos meaning "form." Cigar-or bullet-shaped belemnoid fossils are the favorites of many collectors.
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
What We Do...
Recently three PRI staff traveled to the High Peaks Region of the Adirondack State Park, NY to create a VFE on Mt. Marcy. Mt. Marcy is New York State’s highest peak, at an elevation of 5,344 feet. Most VFE’s to date have focused on the geologic features of an area. To incorporate a broader picture of Earth Systems, we decided to concentrate on the ecological diversity and rare habitats found here.
Stay tuned for more about our excursion and in the mean time enjoy the view from atop Mt. Marcy!
Monday, June 15, 2009
Who done it? The Cretaceous Crime Scene...
Here are a couple photos from this program:

The crime scene.

The dino detectives in action!
If you are interested in this program, or others like it please feel free to visit our website for more information: www.museumoftheearth.org/outreach.php.
Friday, June 12, 2009
Who We Are: Billy Kepner
Thursday, June 11, 2009
WROC 8...
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Fossil of the Week

Sea stars are echinoderms, related to sea urchins, brittle stars, sea lilies, and sea cucumbers. Sea stars are sometimes also called starfish, but this term includes the closely related brittlestars (Class Ophiuroidea). Sea stars are members of the Class Asteroidea, and are radially symmetrical (see our earlier Fossils of the Week on crinoids and sea urchins), typically with five arms. They first evolved in the Ordovician Period (about 460 million years ago), but their fossil record is poor because of their relatively soft bodies that easily fall apart after death. Living sea stars move using a water vascular system - a network of blood-vessel-like tubes and hundreds of tiny "tube feet" with suckers to carry them along. They also use the tube feet to open clams, one of their primary food sources. Another unique feature of a sea star is its two stomachs, one for digestion, and another that can be everted out of the mouth to engulf prey, allowing the sea star to hunt prey that wouldn't fit through its mouth. The arms of sea stars can be regenerated if lost or cut off. The planktonic larvae of sea stars and other echinoderms look nothing like the adults until they settle and metamorphose; echinoderms and their larvae are frequent subjects of developmental research. There are between 1,600 and 1,800 species of living sea stars, all of which are marine. They are important members of marine ecosystems, from both good and bad viewpoints - the Crown of Thorns sea star on the Great Barrier Reef off of Australia is a major predator on living corals and can cause death of a coral reef if present in large numbers.
Text by Paula Mikkelsen, Photo courtesy J. Casciano
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
World's Largest collection of Antarctic Invertebrates Comes to PRI

The addition of this collection to PRI's permanent holdings will allow for new research collaborations between PRI staff and colleagues at other institutions and for scientific visitors to PRI to use these collections for their research. It will also allow PRI to create an online exhibition of the Zinsmeister collection to share these unique specimens with the public that will highlight its importance for discussions of climate change, evolution, and extinction.
"This collection is important for two reasons," stated Dr. Gregory Dietl, Director of Collections at PRI. "The first is that it includes samples from one of the best K-T boundary sections in the world (the time interval when dinosaurs became extinct). Recent discoveries from Seymour Island are challenging the view that the K–T extinctions were caused solely by a catastrophic asteroid impact. Instead, a prolonged interval of decline in diversity, prior to the impact event at the end of the Cretaceous Period 65 million years ago, is evident from the fossil record on Seymour Island. These data suggest that more protracted changes in the Earth’s climate may also have been important. The second reason this collection is important is that it can help us understand the effects of current climate change on marine communities in Antarctica. Today global warming is enabling crab predators to reinvade Antarctica, after being excluded from the region following the onset of a cooling event in the Eocene some 40 million years ago. Scientists are trying to understand how the indigenous fauna will respond to such changes. The collection’s strength during this critical interval in the history of the Antarctic region provides unique information to addressing this problem."
The Zinsmeister collection is full of amazing fossils. Most notable is the heteromorphic ammonite (Diplomoceras), which is related to the living nautilus (pictured below with Judith Nagel-Myers, Collections Manager at PRI). One Diplomoceras specimen measures about 6 feet in length and resembles a saxophone. "It boggles the mind," stated Dr. Dietl. "It makes one wonder how did that organism live; was it able to swim? Most ammonites could swim, but this specimen makes you wonder."

PRI’s collection of fossils is one of the largest in North America. Over the course of the next several years PRI will begin the process of making the Zinsmeister collection publicly available. By making this collection available to researchers, students, and educators, the institution is furthering its more than 75-year mission that was started by Gilbert Harris in 1932.
The Paleontological Research Institution is an active research institution located in Ithaca, New York and was founded in 1932 by Gilbert Harris, professor of geology at Cornell University, to house his collection and library. PRI has outstanding programs in research, collections, publications, and public outreach. The Institution cares for a collection of 2-3 million specimens (one of the 10 largest in the U.S.), and publishes the oldest paleontological journal in the Western Hemisphere (Bulletins of American Paleontology, begun in 1895). In 2003 PRI opened the Museum of the Earth on its campus on Ithaca's West Hill, overlooking Cayuga Lake. This education and exhibits facility contains 8000 square feet of permanent exhibits, telling the history of the Earth and its life through the geologic record of the Northeastern U.S. Unique elements include the skeletons of the Hyde Park Mastodon and Right Whale #2030 and the 544 square foot mural, Rock of Ages Sands of Time. The Museum builds upon PRI’s wide variety of programs and activities for people of all ages.
Friday, June 5, 2009
Things to do...
PRI Director, Warren Allmon, to read from new book at Buffalo Street BooksSaturday, June 6, 4 p.m.
Warren Allmon, Director of the Paleontological Research Institution (PRI), will read from his new book Evolution & Creationism: A Very Short Guide, 2nd ed. at Buffalo Street Books on Saturday, June 6, at 4 PM. This compact volume, written for the general reader, teachers, parents, students, and elected officials, is a concise, user-friendly handbook that addresses organic evolution - the theory that all living things are connected by genealogy and have changed through time. Dr. Allmon will also be available to sign copies and answer questions. For more information about his book, click here. For directions and information on the event, contact Buffalo Street Books at (607) 273-8246 or email BuffaloStreetBooks@hotmail.com This event is free and open to the public.
Buffalo Street Books (formerly Bookery II) is the city's largest and oldest independently owned bookstore and is located in the DeWitt Mall, in the heart of downtown Ithaca. The friendly and knowledgeable staff invites you to enjoy the bright open space, fresh coffee, free wireless access, stylish music and a great selection of books, CDs, DVDs, maps, cards, and more. Buffalo Street Books is open Monday through Saturday from 10 am to 8 pm and Sunday 11 am to 6 pm.
Thursday, June 4, 2009
Louisiana Science Education Act...
The state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education is approving a policy to implement it very soon, and the last day for public comment is June 9th. Below is a draft letter, provided by NCSE, that points out the flaws with the act and recommended changes that would support evolution education and remove the threat of creationist teachings in Louisiana state schools. Please feel free to use the below letter as a guide to form your own letter to the state Board, or simply copy this letter into another document and sign it.
NOTE: Comments must be sent by mail, and should arrive no later than June 9 at 4:30 pm. Please address them to:
Nina A. Ford
State Board of Elementary and Secondary Education
P.O. Box 94064
Capitol Station
Baton Rouge, LA 70804-9064
The Paleontological Research Institution will be sending a letter to Ms. Ford and the state Board later this afternoon on behalf of the institution, its staff, and national members. But every voice is very important, so please take a moment of time and contact your state Board with a version of the letter provided, and share this with any other concerned citizens in the great state of Louisiana.
____________________________________________________________________
Dear Ms. Ford:
Act 473, the Louisiana Science Education Act, is written so loosely as to allow creationism and other religious concepts to be taught in classrooms. In order to protect the civil liberties of students and to protect local educational authorities from costly litigation, BESE's policy implementing this act, which was adopted on January 13, 2009, must close any loopholes that might allow non-science into classrooms. In particular the following aspects of the policy passed in January, 2009, require revision.
Section C should have the sentence "Religious beliefs shall not be advanced under the guise of critical thinking" restored. This language is based on State Superintendent Pastorek's letter to LEAs on August 27, 2008, and serves as an important warning for teachers and administrators.
The process for challenging supplemental material laid out in section D of the proposed policy is unclear, ill-conceived, and onerous. The instructions for the Department of Education review are vague and confusing, and they unnecessarily complicate what should be a straightforward decision based on the professional expertise of Department of Education staff. In considering citizen input concerning supplementary materials, the process should not require a "meeting" at which "any interested party" could "present their arguments" (D.3). Such a meeting places a needless burden on the finances and time of concerned parents, teachers, and staff. It would be better to employ the extant system of public comment on textbooks for adoption, which allows written comments to be submitted by a set deadline. In the absence of any clear deadline for resolution of a challenge, it is likely that inappropriate material would remain in a classroom indefinitely after a challenge. A better procedure would allow the LDoE to generate a list of clearly inappropriate material based on their expertise and experience as educators, and provide that list to BESE for approval. Citizen challenges to those materials would be automatically sustained, while challenges to other material should be reviewed by LDoE staff based on a speedy process involving public comment and peer review by recognized experts in science and science education.
In addition, section D.4.b requires only that material be "scientifically sound and supported by scientific evidence." Materials which contradict the Louisiana Content Standards should be subject to additional review to ensure that they are not outdated or otherwise lacking in scientific credibility. Science classes should endeavor to give students a context to understand the current state of scientific knowledge, recognizing that "[f]or scientific ideas to become widely accepted, peers must review, analyze, and critique results through journal articles, replication of experiments, and presentations at scientific meetings" (Louisiana Content Standards, Benchmarks, and Grade Level Expectations for Science §301.B). Scientific claims which have not been reviewed by the scientific community, or which have been found lacking after such review, do not belong in science classrooms. Works which deny widely agreed upon scientific concepts like evolution and anthropogenic climate change are thus not appropriate for science class. Section D.4.b should thus require that information contained in the supplemental materials must be accepted by the community of scientists as valid, current, and
rigorous science.
Finally, the LSEA Advisory Committee had recommended a prohibition against teaching creationism in Section D.4.d, reading:
"Materials that teach creationism or intelligent design or that advance the religious belief that a supernatural being created humankind shall be prohibited for use in science classes."
This much-needed clarification was unfortunately removed from the policy before it was passed. It would prevent the use of inappropriate and unconstitutional teaching materials, and should be reinserted into the policy just as the LDoE's experts recommended.
Thank you for your consideration and your efforts to improve science education in Louisiana.
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Fossil of the Week
Sea urchins are echinoderms, related to sea stars, brittle stars, sea lilies, and sea cucumbers. They belong to the Class Echinoidea, along with sand dollars, heart urchins, and sea biscuits. Because of their hard test, echinoids have a good fossil record, dating back to the middle Ordovician. They have radial symmetry (see our earlier Fossil of the Week on crinoids) and a hard, calcareous "test" or outer skeleton that is festooned with moveable spines for protection and in some cases locomotion. This particular specimen is called a pencil urchin because the spines are as thick as pencils. The word "urchin" comes from Old English as a name for a hedgehog - an obvious similarity! The mouthparts of sea urchins are a complex system of muscles and calcareous plates called Aristotle's Lantern that can be partially extruded from the mouth for grazing on algae.Text by Paula Mikkelsen, Photo Courtesy J. Casciano
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
What We Do...
Monday, June 1, 2009
Traveling Trilobites...
Truby continued her adventures in Maine at the Shoals Marine Laboratory on Appledore Island, participating in a class on Marine Invertebrate Biodiversity. Below are photos from her adventure:

Although the weather was rainy, Truby admired the view from her balcony of the lab's ships and small boats in the harbor.

Tidepools are wonderful places to explore! Truby wore her wetsuit today against the mud and rain!

Digging for clams was fun! We found some whoppers!

Truby listened attentively in class alongside Cornell students Catherine, Natalie, and Jake. Dr. Drew Harvell, the instructor of the class (looking on from the back row), enjoyed her presence.

Microscopes aren't really designed with trilobites in mind.

Truby thought the seawater tank, where students kept marine plants and animals to examine later in the lab, was fun to explore.

A museum collection of identified specimens helps students identify what they find in the field. Truby admires a jar of blue mussels.