De ijstijden Guide to 1960 exhibition

THE ICE AGE IN EUROPE especially in the Netherlands In the entrance hall a map (fig. 4) shows the largest extent of the glaciation in Europe. A model of a glacier suggests how the stones and hills shown on the photographs were transported or modelled by the ice. A stone and a buffalo’s skull have ev...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: NN
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 1960
Subjects:
Eik
Online Access:http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/505162
http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/document/548819
id ftnaturalis:oai:naturalis:505162
record_format openpolar
spelling ftnaturalis:oai:naturalis:505162 2023-05-15T17:13:37+02:00 De ijstijden Guide to 1960 exhibition NN 1960 application/pdf http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/505162 http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/document/548819 unknown http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/505162 http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/document/548819 (c) Naturalis Beaufortia (0067-4745) vol.8 (1960) nr.90 p.93 Article / Letter to the editor 1960 ftnaturalis 2022-09-01T06:21:34Z THE ICE AGE IN EUROPE especially in the Netherlands In the entrance hall a map (fig. 4) shows the largest extent of the glaciation in Europe. A model of a glacier suggests how the stones and hills shown on the photographs were transported or modelled by the ice. A stone and a buffalo’s skull have even been found deep in the soil where Amsterdam now stands. An enormous bear tells us of the animals that once braved the cold. In the first room (left of entrance hall) the tropical or subtropical life, before the Ice Age, is shown. Of the four glacial periods distinguished by the palaeontologists the first did not influence our climate. We see the animals then living here: the largest known elephant, Archidiscodon meridionalis, (fig. 2, shoulder 5 m. high), rhino, tapir, hippo, sabletoothtiger (fig. 3), hyaena, antelopes, porcupine, beavers, deer and a monkey. Many of their remains are disclosed by the water from the bottom of the Zeeland Sea-arms, others are found in the clay-pits at Tegelen, known for their pottery clay ever since Roman times. Both are sedimentations of the rivers of the first interglacial period. The plant remains are shown in a pollen diagram: the cork epidermis of the pollen is preserved in the layers deposited at a certain time (a picture shows some pollen grains highly enlarged). The diagram covering a depth of about 5 m shows the changing climate: willow (wilg) and birch (berk) belong to colder times, oak (eik) and hazel (hazelaar) point to a milder climate. The room to the right of the hall shows the animals that survived here during the cold period. The last glacial period (fig. 4) saw reindeer, musk-ox, glutton, mammoth (fig. 5), woolly rhino, giant deer, bear. Many of them have been pictured by the human inhabitants in their caves, as the reproductions on the exhibition show. The wisent (fig. 6) survived, as probably did the Przewalski horses, and others (boar, elk, deer). The next room shows the animals that inhabited our regions after the Ice age: as said some adapted themselves to the ... Article in Journal/Newspaper musk ox Naturalis Digital Academic Repository (National Museum of Natural History in the Netherlands) Eik ENVELOPE(6.668,6.668,62.627,62.627)
institution Open Polar
collection Naturalis Digital Academic Repository (National Museum of Natural History in the Netherlands)
op_collection_id ftnaturalis
language unknown
description THE ICE AGE IN EUROPE especially in the Netherlands In the entrance hall a map (fig. 4) shows the largest extent of the glaciation in Europe. A model of a glacier suggests how the stones and hills shown on the photographs were transported or modelled by the ice. A stone and a buffalo’s skull have even been found deep in the soil where Amsterdam now stands. An enormous bear tells us of the animals that once braved the cold. In the first room (left of entrance hall) the tropical or subtropical life, before the Ice Age, is shown. Of the four glacial periods distinguished by the palaeontologists the first did not influence our climate. We see the animals then living here: the largest known elephant, Archidiscodon meridionalis, (fig. 2, shoulder 5 m. high), rhino, tapir, hippo, sabletoothtiger (fig. 3), hyaena, antelopes, porcupine, beavers, deer and a monkey. Many of their remains are disclosed by the water from the bottom of the Zeeland Sea-arms, others are found in the clay-pits at Tegelen, known for their pottery clay ever since Roman times. Both are sedimentations of the rivers of the first interglacial period. The plant remains are shown in a pollen diagram: the cork epidermis of the pollen is preserved in the layers deposited at a certain time (a picture shows some pollen grains highly enlarged). The diagram covering a depth of about 5 m shows the changing climate: willow (wilg) and birch (berk) belong to colder times, oak (eik) and hazel (hazelaar) point to a milder climate. The room to the right of the hall shows the animals that survived here during the cold period. The last glacial period (fig. 4) saw reindeer, musk-ox, glutton, mammoth (fig. 5), woolly rhino, giant deer, bear. Many of them have been pictured by the human inhabitants in their caves, as the reproductions on the exhibition show. The wisent (fig. 6) survived, as probably did the Przewalski horses, and others (boar, elk, deer). The next room shows the animals that inhabited our regions after the Ice age: as said some adapted themselves to the ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author NN
spellingShingle NN
De ijstijden Guide to 1960 exhibition
author_facet NN
author_sort NN
title De ijstijden Guide to 1960 exhibition
title_short De ijstijden Guide to 1960 exhibition
title_full De ijstijden Guide to 1960 exhibition
title_fullStr De ijstijden Guide to 1960 exhibition
title_full_unstemmed De ijstijden Guide to 1960 exhibition
title_sort de ijstijden guide to 1960 exhibition
publishDate 1960
url http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/505162
http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/document/548819
long_lat ENVELOPE(6.668,6.668,62.627,62.627)
geographic Eik
geographic_facet Eik
genre musk ox
genre_facet musk ox
op_source Beaufortia (0067-4745) vol.8 (1960) nr.90 p.93
op_relation http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/505162
http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/document/548819
op_rights (c) Naturalis
_version_ 1766070792557166592