Culture24's top ten Science and Nature stories of 2014
This article originally appeared on Culture24.
Charles Darwin's notebooks, Patrick Moore's BBC scripts and David Livingstone's African beetles; just a few of the top stories of 2104 in Science and Nature
© Nick Rochowski / Science Museum The Large Hadron Collider arrives in ManchesterPeople might not have been able to get to CERN’s Geneva base, reasoned the Museum of Science and Industry, so the particle physics laboratory arrived in Manchester – or, at least, a luminous recreation of it, following a spell at the Science Museum which attracted 25,000 visitors. Olivier Award-winning actors Michael Wynne and Finn Ross were part of a display combining curation and theatre.
© Oxford University Thousands visit the reopened Oxford University Museum of Natural History
Curators were eager to reopen after 14 months out and a dawn call saw the earliest of 5,000 people on the opening Saturday. It followed a period Director Paul Smith described as a “long, dark year”. “It is very nice to see the doors opened again without buckets to collect rainwater,” he added of a place first opened as a home for seven million specimens in 1860.
© Chris Doherty Patrick Moore’s archive moves to the Science MuseumPersonally assembled at the home where he would work and rest when he wasn’t welcoming impromptu, starry-eyed visitors, Patrick Moore’s collection came
under the care of the Science Museum in an agreement fostered by the
master astronomer’s former friend, Queen guitarist Dr Brian May. The
items, including draft scripts for The Sky at Night and detailed drawings, will be made available to the public once they have been
catalogued.
© Cambridge University Library Cambridge University releases vast collection of Charles Darwin notes and picturesDarwin’s Pencil Sketch, in 1842, was the first time the scientist coined the term “natural selection”. Perhaps this one artefact encapsulated a collection described by academics as the most complete explanation of his thought patterns, with the “seedbed of the Origin” initially taking form in late 1838 and 1839.
© Iain Pate Semiconductor and Chris Watson foray through forestsThree
of the country’s most creative science artists – Cabaret Voltaire
founder Chris Watson and Brighton art duo Ruth Jarman and Joe Gerhardt,
known as Semiconductor – plotted singular routes for public explorers
through forests in Northumberland and Surrey. Part of Watson’s walk,
including hidden multichannel speakers, was inspired by ravens from
Norse mythology; Jarman and Gerhardt’s “very wobbly”, semi-permanent
design incorporated a 26-metre flux tower.
© The Trustees of the Natural History Museum, London Beetles from David Livingstone’s African adventures found in vaultsMax
Barclay, a beetle curator, was carrying out a routine check when he
found a box of 20 pinned specimens. Gathered by lawyer and amateur
entomologist Edward Young Western when he accompanied David
Livingstone’s Zambezi River expedition 150 years ago, they will, as a
pleasantly surprised Barclay admitted, be studied by observers for
generations to come.
© Wellcome Library, London Wellcome Trust sends 100,000 exhibits free online
You can’t say fairer than a collection which “touches and illuminates almost every facet of human existence”, as British Academy Fellow Colin Jones credits the trust’s set of more than 100,000 images with being. Users can copy, edit and use each object under the blessing of a modest acknowledgement: the oldest is a 2,000-year-old prescription from Egypt.
© NHM, London Natural History Museum’s Russian guest – the most complete woolly mammoth ever found
Comparable in size to a large dog but with some fairly noticeable differences, this mammoth baby was spotted frozen in wet clay and mud by a reindeer herder on a Siberian peninsular seven years ago. Part of a vast herd of a huge Ice Age creatures, Lyuba – ‘love’ in Russian – died 42,000 years ago.
© Courtesy NHM World's most complete Stegosaurus fossil skeleton goes on showNo
surprise that Professor Paul Barrett, the NHM’s lead dinosaur
researcher, described this 300-bone, 150 million-year-old fossil
as an “extraordinary” specimen. With the distinction of becoming the
first complete specimen to join the display in nearly a century, this
most recognisable giant is the size of a 4x4 originally arrived from Switzerland and the
US at the end of 2013.
© Grant Museum of Zoology UCL Grant Museum bids to preserve rarest skeleton in the worldLondon’s Grant Museum is ceaselessly ambitious. After years of corrosion – partly because of the proximity visitors are allowed to them, which should induce a few guilty donations – curators started preservation work on 40 of their largest skeletons, from gorillas and rhinos to baby orang-utans and river dolphins.
What do you think? Leave a comment below.More from Culture24's review of 2014:Top ten literary history and heritage stories of 2014Top ten archaeology stories of 2014Top ten military history stories of 2014
Source: http://www.culture24.org.uk//science-and-nature/art510398-culture24s-top-ten-science-and-nature-stories-of-2014