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New Mexico Museum of Natural History &
Science Presents -
Emergence: A New View of Life's Origin

Albuquerque, NM – Emergence: A
New View of Life's Origin opens at the New
Mexico Museum of Natural History & Science, July
1, 2011.
Every living thing we know of derives from
existing biology, but scientists still don’t
agree on how abiotic molecules originally
bootstrapped themselves into the building blocks
of life almost four billion years ago. The new
exhibit, Emergence: A New View of Life's Origin,
explores the most fundamental questions about
the origin and evolution of life on our planet
and offers scientists’ latest insights about
these complex questions.
A collaboration between the New
Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science,
the Santa Fe Institute and New Mexico Highlands
University, the exhibit was developed,
fabricated, and installed with funding from a
$162,822 grant from the National Science
Foundation. The exhibit team, in addition to
researchers, educators, and exhibit designers,
included media arts students at New Mexico
Highlands University and Americorps volunteers.
Santa Fe Institute Professor D.
Eric Smith says the exhibit covers recent
discoveries made possible by the use of improved
mathematical and computational techniques. It
covers the formation and geologic history of
Earth, early life forms, inorganic and organic
chemistry leading to life, and the formation of
biological structures such as DNA, RNA, and
proteins.
According to Media Arts Assistant Professor,
Megan Jacobs, “The exhibit offers insight into
important issues like global warming, the
potential cure for diseases, and how life could
have developed on other planets. Our students
grappled with complex scientific ideas to make
them visually interesting and understandable for
museum patrons of all ages.”
In
addition, Jacobs added, “The process has been an
invaluable experience for the students involved.
They have learned how to distill complex
information, as well as gained experience in how
to collaborate with scientists and museum
professionals. These are valuable skills that
will help students make the transition from
student to professional.”
The centerpiece of the students’
work is an illustrated timeline 16-feet long and
eight-feet tall that traces the evolution of
earth from its formation 4.6 billion years ago
to 400 million years ago.
First-year media arts graduate
student, Gabriel Garcia, developed the design
concept for the timeline. “The design uses a
double helix DNA strand that guides the viewer
through a sequence of events explaining the
significant moments of creation, with each
strand representing the geosphere and biosphere
flowing through time.” Garcia said. “The
texturing of the helix illustrates geological
processes that changed earth’s once lifeless
surface to the flourishing terrestrial landscape
we see today.”
“Science is a global, universal
experience. It was awesome to help develop an
exhibit that shares profound information about
life’s origins,” Garcia said.
The students created their work
for the museum though the New Mexico Highland’s
University Media Arts Department’s Program for
Interactive Cultural Technology, PICT, a
partnership with the New Mexico Department of
Cultural Affairs.
Mimi Roberts, Director for Media Projects at the
New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, says
the exhibit, “allows us to use new technologies
to make the exhibit expandable and updatable as
new discoveries are made. Origin of life
research is happening all over the world, but
some of the most important and exciting
discoveries are being made right here in New
Mexico.”
Researchers at the Santa Fe
Institute, which specializes in the
cross-disciplinary study of highly complex
systems, led the creation of the exhibit’s
scientific content, relying on the latest
insights available at the forefront of geology,
geochemistry, biology, mathematics, and
computation.
“The Highlands media arts students developed
professional museum quality work that really
impressed us,” said Elena Sweeney, New Mexico
Museum of Natural History and Science Interim
Executive Director. “They used technology in
innovative ways to interpret scientific material
and the exhibit has a very dynamic, interactive
feel to it. We are a proud partner in this
project and look forward to sharing this new
exhibit with the public.”
Through hands-on exploration,
interactives, and a unique 3-D video filmed in
the Carlsbad caves, you will discover the latest
research on the origin of life, and how this
quest for knowledge has applications as
far-reaching as informing data received from
Mars and curing disease. Don’t miss Emergence: A
New View of Life's Origin. Open July 1, 2011, at
the New Mexico Museum of Natural History &
Science. |