This is Throwback Thursday #269. In these, we look back into the past at ESCONI specifically and Earth Science in general. If you have any contributions, (science, pictures, stories, etc ...), please sent them to [email protected]. Thanks! email:[email protected].
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If you've been to the Field Museum in the last 100 years or so, you've invariably ran into the giant ground sloth Megatherium. It's been displayed in a bunch of settings over the years, with its current home in Evolving Planet. The Field Museum has many photos of its journey from discovery to display.
Excavation in Bolivia (photos courtesy of Elmer S. Riggs)
Men applying plaster jacket to a Megatherium. Link
BTW, CBC Radio's Quirks & Quarks did a recent segment on giant ground sloths.
Sloths used to be giants the size of bears and even elephants before disappearing around 12,000 years ago. An international group of paleontologists including University of Toronto's Gerry De Iuliis have assembled a comprehensive family tree of the sloth to understand how a group that used to dominate the landscape was winnowed away to only a handful of relatively small, tree dwelling species. The research was published in the journal Science.