March 17, 2010 6:35 PM

Smithsonian Opens Human Evolution Hall

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CBSNews
(AP)  Hundreds of early human fossils, artifacts and forensically recreated faces of mankind's prehistoric relatives went on display Wednesday, exploring 6 million years of evolution at the National Museum of Natural History.

The nearly $21 million Hall of Human Origins marks the 100th anniversary of the Smithsonian Institution museum and represents the most comprehensive look at human evolution since its opening.

The massive hall includes rare specimens, including the only original fossil of a Neanderthal skeleton in the United States. Two skulls discovered more than a century ago of a Neanderthal and a Cro-Magnon are on loan from the Musee de l'Homme in Paris.

Curator Rick Potts, who directs the museum's human origins research, said the permanent exhibit represents major changes in scientists' understanding of evolution over recent decades.

"What we've learned is the old icon of the march from the early humans from a primate like creature to an ape like creature to us today is not correct — that our species is part of a diverse family tree of perhaps as many as 20 species or more," he said. "What we also see is we are the only one left."

That makes the story of evolution a survival story, Potts said. The exhibit is the first to examine how climate change motivated adaptations and changes in human ancestors.

Rather than focus on a single spectacular fossil or discovery like many evolution halls, the Smithsonian exhibit is built around the major milestones of evolution — such as when humans began walking upright, grew larger brains and began using tools and symbols.

"All of these things are part of what it means to be human from the sense of our species," Potts said.

Life-size bronze sculptures of various early humans line the gallery to illustrate milestones, such as the eating of meat and the control of fire. One statue caught the eye of 6-year-old Surya Jain of Toronto, whose family extended their vacation in Washington by a day to see the new hall.

"I think it's really cool," he said of the statue slightly taller than himself. "My favorite part is the Homo erectus carrying this wildebeest, I think."

His mother, Sonali Verma, said the many hands-on elements are sure to engage children as well as adults. They were among dozens of visitors who lined up outside the gallery before its unveiling.

"We're trying to get visitors to connect with their ancestors in a very direct way," said exhibits director Michael Atwood Mason, noting several new approaches in the hall.

A "morphing station" allows visitors to have their photos transformed into how they might have looked as early humans and e-mail a copy to themselves. Former Sen. Bill Frist, who is on the museum's board, was among the first to try it out.

Casts and fossil scans also allow visitors to see key discoveries from recent decades. Lucy, the world's most famous fossil, has a corner. She is a 3.2 million-year-old early human who walked upright and climbed trees.

Replicas of early human footprints nearby in the floor allow visitors to walk in prehistoric steps.

On view for the first time are scanned replicas of the "hobbit" fossil discovered in Indonesia in 2003, which was part of the Homo floresiensis species.

"It will change your ideas about humanity," Smithsonian Secretary Wayne Clough said. "You can peer into the eyes of your ancestors."

Most funding for the exhibit came from billionaire David H. Koch, executive vice president of Kansas-based energy company Koch Industries Inc. Koch, who was the Libertarian Party's vice presidential candidate in 1980 and donates to conservative causes, gave $15 million to fund the project.

The group Greenpeace staged a small protest outside the museum Wednesday with signs saying Koch is "wanted for climate crimes." They handed out fliers saying Koch also funds projects denying climate change.

Museum director Cristian Samper said Koch was keenly interested in science and committed to the museum's research.

Physicist Peter Buck, co-founder of Subway restaurants, also gave $15 million to fund ongoing research of humanity's origins and to begin new education programs tied to the exhibit.

AP
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by rf35 March 18, 2010 9:12 AM EDT
Sounds like a wonderful display. Our knowledge of human origins is expanding at an incredible rate. I constantly anticipate the latest discoveries in the field. I look forward to the day this display can be updated to show the complete story of mankind and its relatives from the first protohominids to modern man and the various offshoots and branches along the way. I am especially interested to see where H. floresiensis fits into the picture. Quite the anthropological drama going on with that one.
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by slownewsday_____ March 18, 2010 8:55 AM EDT
Creationists appear to believe that a Jewish zombie can make you live forever in paradise as long as you telepathically tell him that you accept him as your master so he can remove an evil force from you that's present because a woman made out of a rib was convinced by a talking snake to eat from a magical tree.

Makes sense to me...


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by rf35 March 18, 2010 9:18 AM EDT
Don't forget that you must also eat his flesh and drink his blood to solidify the connection. And I seem to remember that he is somehow his own father...
by traffic101 May 8, 2010 2:41 PM EDT
Well maybe when they scientifically explain it then you might understand why we are here. I mean when they show we actually are decendents from one person. Did you ever think the story might be told in a non scientific way? Do you really believe there is no soul?

You know what i think? Sure, if you don't believe when you die, yeah that's it. But believe and you will have everlasting life. So for you when the time comes that's it! Surely you mock all your ancestors before you by knocking religion. Where did you come from? And why are you here? If that's not a miracle to you just being here i don't understand what exactly makes sense to you?
by flyers7704 March 18, 2010 8:22 AM EDT
Ok, you creationists can believe whatever you want to believe... but not everyone in this world is a Christian and not all Christians are so thick that they have to take the Bible as completely true and just not stories of parable to lead people to do good things in life. A guide if you will...

Ah, forget it, you just can't argue with extremists... They'll always want to inject their religious beliefs in to everyone elses lives...
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by formrusmcsgt March 18, 2010 5:51 AM EDT
Isn't it downright incredible how believers in fairy tale attack evolution as not being "factual"?

As if facts mean anything to them in the first place......
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by wf_tx March 18, 2010 12:05 AM EDT
Amazed - obviously, the scientific community disagrees with you, and they have powerful and compelling evidence. I seriously doubt that little ole you has come into possession of scientific and mathmatical wisdom that simply befuddles everyone else. :)
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by wf_tx March 17, 2010 11:50 PM EDT
Loucka and Amazed:

Regarding the meaning of the word "theory," I think you have confused the colloquial (or common) use of the word and the scientific use of the word. The American Heritage Dictionary does a good job of differentiating the two.

Colloquial or common use of "theory": An assumption based on limited information or knowledge; a conjecture.

Scientific use of "theory": A set of statements or principles devised to explain a group of facts or phenomena, especially one that has been repeatedly tested or is widely accepted and can be used to make predictions about natural phenomena.

Once you comprehend these two definitions and their proper use, you'll see that when the scientific community, who is the author of the Theory of Evolution, calls evolution a theory, it is saying that the evidence is very conclusive -- not merely conjecture.

I hope this helps!
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by nic1234567-2009 March 18, 2010 11:35 AM EDT
No we don?t believe you. Intelligent Design can?t prove anything. Allowing for an intelligent designer to account for unlikely complexity only postpones the problem; as such a designer would need to be at least as complex. Other scientists have argued that evolution through selection is better able to explain the observed complexity, as is evident from the use selective evolution to design certain electronic, aeronautic and automotive systems which are considered problems too complex for human "intelligent designers".[
Irreducible complexity even Behe has acknowledged using "sloppy prose", and that his "argument against Darwinism does not add up to a logical proof.
Specified complexity The conceptual soundness of Dembski's specified complexity/CSI argument has been widely discredited by the scientific and mathematical communities. They argue that this procedure is flawed as a model for scientific inference because the asymmetric way it treats the different possible explanations renders it prone to making false conclusions. Specified complexity has yet to be shown to have wide applications in other fields as Dembski asserts.
by rwsmith29456 March 17, 2010 11:41 PM EDT
God gave us brains to use. Science is a productive way to use our brains. What we have to be careful of is not letting us think ourselves to be wiser than we are. I'm glad to have technology like, for example, anesthesia. I've had several surgeries and am grateful for that and a zillion other things that technology accomplishes. Then there is bad science, like Africanized honey bees. Give nature a little tweak and it turns around and stings you. Some people use dogma to pursuade people to give them money. Some scientists get the results they are paid to get. There's good and bad all around.
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by ge556 March 17, 2010 11:12 PM EDT
"The only mutation I can think of that gives somewhat of an advantage is sickle-cell anemia, and it's hardly an advantage. Far from, like Darwin says, enough to eradicate everyone else and only leave standing those who suffer from the ailment."

"Bacteria and viruses, the simplest form of life we know of, change and adapt to their environment, if they can. But that is already hot-wired into their genetic sequence."

amazedd, I do believe your religion commands you not to bear false witness. Darwin said no such thing.

Bacteria and viruses adapt by mutation. Why do you claim so many things that are false?
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by misands March 17, 2010 10:37 PM EDT
Shame on the Smithsonian to promote this nonsense. The bible clearly states that the Earth is 6,000 years old, and I don't know about you, but I don't believe Jesus evolved from monkeys.
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by ge556 March 17, 2010 10:28 PM EDT
Amazedd, do you believe in the Creation story in the Bible?
Which one? There's one in Genesis 1, and a different one in Genesis 2. They conflict. Different orders of creation.
One of many proofs that the Bible is not 100% literal truth.

Truth Teller
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by loucka-2009 March 17, 2010 11:01 PM EDT
We forgive you for your misunderstanding with the Church and bless you in His name. While I agree that the actual years since creation have been debated there is no disagreement with Biblical scholars that His creation is no older than lineage back to Adam.

The "scientific" evidence merely points to an erroneous theory on evolution. Man was created in His image with just a thought from God. Some of our scholars have put forth that evolution has its place after and only after Adam.
by curse914 March 17, 2010 11:32 PM EDT
Really, you forgive him? Well, your God is not so forgiving.

The list is so long I had to cut it off.

The following is a list of people murdered by God directly or through His command.

* The entire population of the earth except for eight survivors (Genesis 7:23)
* Every inhabitant of Sodom and Gomorrah except for one family (Genesis 19:24)
* Every first born of Egypt (Exodus 12:29)
* All the hosts of the Pharaoh, including the captains of 600 chariots (Exodus 14:27,28)
* Amalek and his people (Exodus 17:11,16)
* 3,000 Israelites (Exodus 32:27)
* 250 Levite princes who had challenged the leadership of Moses (Numbers 16:1-40)
* 14,700 Jews in a plague who had rebelled against Moses following the killing of the princes (Numbers 16:41-49)
* All the subjects of Og (Numbers 21:34, 35)
* 24,000 Israelites who lived with Moabite women (Numbers 25:4, 9)
* All the males, kings, and non-virgin females of the Midianites (Numbers 31:7, 8)
* The Ammonites (Deuteronomy 2:19-21)
* The Horims (Deuteronomy 2:22)
* All the citizens of Jericho, except for a prostitute and her family (Joshua 6)
* 12,000 citizens of Ai. Joshua hung the king on a tree. (Joshua 8:1-30)
* All the people of Makkedah (Joshua 10:28)
* All the people of Libnah (Joshua 10:29, 30)
* All the people of Gezer (Joshua 10:33)
* All the people of Lachish (Joshua 10:32)
* All the people of Eglon (Joshua 10:34, 35)
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