Arts and Entertainment
December 22, 2022
From: University of Michigan Museum of Natural HistoryTrail after an Ice Age Mastodon - Museum At Home: Adult Edition
Did you miss the UMMNH Farrand Memorial Lecture on cutting-edge research? Watch a recording of the lecture by Daniel C. Fisher, Claude W. Hibbard Collegiate Professor of Paleontology, about how chemical analysis of tusks reveal one male mastodon’s struggles and victories, from adolescence to the mating-season battle that ultimately claimed his life.
Museum@Home is issued twice a month. The Family Edition is issued on the first Wednesday of the month, and the Adult Edition on the third Wednesday.
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Audience: Teens and Adults
Grades: 9-12+
Duration: 90 minutes
Focusing on the life of the Buesching mastodon, represented by the large cast skeleton displayed in the atrium of the U-M Museum of Natural History, On the Trail of an Ice Age Mastodon will reveal the story of one male’s struggles and victories, from adolescence to the mating-season battle that ultimately claimed his life.
Paleontologists seeking to understand the lives of extinct animals often make do with scant clues gleaned from an animal’s skeleton, from its circumstances of preservation, and from its time of death. Reconstructing lost ecosystems is always a challenge, but sometimes we get lucky. At its best, the fossil record provides clear snapshots, or even motion sequences from the past, such as footprints showing how an animal moved. On a larger scale, we can now read records of growth and behavior archived in the mineralized layers of mastodon tusks, allowing us to follow a single animal for years, across entire landscapes. For the first time, we identify seasonal migratory behavior that may have been key to meeting the challenges of reproduction near the end of the Ice Age.
2022 Farrand Memorial Lecture Recording
The Farrand Memorial Lecture honors the memory of Dr. William R. Farrand, who served as Director of the U-M Exhibit Museum of Natural History for seven years (July 1993-June 2000), as well as his long career as a professor in the U-M Department of Geological Sciences. Past lectures have covered topics such as U-M collections, astronomy, biodiversity, evolution, and climate change.