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Laelaps

Musings on evolution, the fossil record, and our place in nature

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melittle.jpg Laelaps is the blog of freelance science writer Brian Switek. This blog frequently features his musings on paleontology, evolution, and the history of science. Switek also blogs for Smithsonian magazine's Dinosaur Tracking, and he is a research associate at the New Jersey State Museum.


Switek's first book, Written in Stone, will be published on November 1, 2010 by Bellevue Literary Press.

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« The New Paleobiological Synthesis | Main | Walking "The Paleontology Path" »

A Sad Day for Paleontology

Category: Paleontology
Posted on: June 30, 2009 9:05 AM, by Brian Switek

At the end of the day today the University of Wyoming Geological Museum is going to be closed. The museum and the paleontologists who worked there are victims of state budget cuts, and the spirited effort to keep the museum open did not get top-level administrators to change their minds. The closure of the museum is still a shock to paleontologist Brent Breithaupt, who worked hard to make it what it is now. He recently told the Laramie Boomerang:

I can't fathom the concept that I'm not going to be coming in every day to see the dinosaurs. ... I can't fathom the concept that the dinosaurs won't be there for other people to see; to see the little kids come in and be excited for the dinosaurs. I can't fathom the concept that this museum will not be there for them.

The museum will not be there for professors, university students, or state and federal agencies who regularly made use of it and Breithaupt's expertise, either.

What will become of the museum? It is difficult to say. Efforts are underway to secure private funding to reopen it sometime in the near future, but that is going to be a difficult task. You can keep up with the effort to re-open the museum at the Keep Laramie Dinos site.

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Comments

1

Sigh. I met some people in Istanbul who lamented that in their city of 10+ million, there was not one natural history museum, not one, and that as a result very, very few of their kids ever go through a 'dinosaur phase'. Awful.

Posted by: Karen James | July 2, 2009 9:59 AM

2

Over three quarters of a million people have visited the creation "museum", while real museums are forced to close. A sad day for science, and for our country.

Posted by: Raymond Minton | July 3, 2009 12:59 PM

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