Friday, May 2, 2014

The Lost Land of the Lost

The Hall of Late Dinosaurs, circa 1958
The Museum of Natural History in New York recently placed their image collections online. Anybody who grew up in and around the region should recognize this picture -- AMNH's Late Dinosaur Hall, circa 1958. Generations of schoolkids, including children of countless immigrants (and a Brooklyn kid named Carl Sagan) got their first in-person glimpses of dinosaurs in this room. In its own way, it's a place where history happened.

Visitor with allosaur, 1959. Note the contemporary "Guide-a-Phone."
By 1995 the dinosaur halls were completely renovated. Instead of being presented chronologically (dinosaurs living at the same time), they were organized cladistically, in terms of evolutionary relationships. While specialists prefer the latter, I miss the old arrangement because it offered an idea of the creatures' living context. T. Rex used to battle Triceratops, and we saw them displayed together. The new arrangement is too abstract for most people--and it has too many video screens, distracting visitors from the fossils themselves.

Twins from The Shining with Brontosaurus, 1959
© 2014 Nicholas Nicastro