They may have been dead for 65 million years, but the dinosaurs at the Natural History Museum Abu Dhabi still appear to be scuffling in the brutal cycle of life.
Two skeletal Tyrannosauruses – one of them called Stan – are frozen in battle over the remains of a Triceratops. Sauropods crane their long necks, as if reaching for the topmost leaves of towering trees. A menacing fish's mouth is agape, a split second away from snapping its sharp teeth on a spindly-shelled turtle. The skies are dominated by Pterosaurs, peering for prey.
This scenographic approach, devised with a storyteller’s sensibility, runs through the museum, which opens to visitors on Saturday. It tells a story that spans 13.8 billion years, crossing through time and space.
“A museum is about theatre,” says Phillip Manning, the new attraction's director of science. “You're telling a story. Every single object in this building tells a story. If we can aid the way you tell that story, wonderful.”
The museum instils wonder from its atrium, where the sauropod skeletons are displayed. While the exterior architecture – by Mecanoo – has long been the subject of fascination, rising in the Saadiyat Cultural District in shapes that echo rock formations, the interior is just as awe-inspiring. Sunlight streams through deep, pentagonal and square wells, illuminating the space naturally during the day. There is a cafe and gift shop by the atrium, the latter selling educational materials, children’s books and plush toys of dinosaurs and whales.
The museum’s galleries are located below. The experience starts with the beginning of the universe, but before stepping into this cosmic genesis, visitors cross a space speckled with the stars in the night sky as it was on December 2, 1971 – when the UAE was founded.
Visitors then head into the Big Bang when, as the digital wall literature explains, “In a split second, the building blocks of all matter were formed.”
An embodiment of these early moments of the universe is the Murchison meteorite.
What initially seems like an unassuming piece of rock holds clues about the conditions and processes of the early universe. The meteorite is 4.6 billion years old, the same age as our solar system. It contains grains from about seven billion years ago, traces of stars that exploded long before our solar system formed.
The Murchison meteorite is the first display in the gallery. The museum is home to “the largest exhibition of meteorites in the Middle East and one of the top displays of meteorites in the world”, says Ludovic Ferriere, curator of geology and meteorites.
The Murchison meteorite definitely inspires the imagination, but it is not the most visibly impressive specimen in the first gallery. That honour goes to the pallasites. These stony-iron meteorites are renowned for their olivine crystals, which glow like embers in the museum lighting. They are rare, making up less than one per cent of discovered meteorites, and are believed to come from the depths of destroyed planets or large asteroids.
One of the most impressive pallasites on display weighs 650kg and was once held by Nasa. “It is the largest piece of such a pallasite,” Ferriere says.
There is a display of Martian meteorites, rocks that formed on the Red Planet and were blasted into space by an impact, before surviving their plunge through the Earth’s atmosphere and finally landing on the surface of our planet.
But perhaps most impressive is a fragment of the Moon that visitors can touch. “It is one of the largest pieces of the Moon, a 45kg piece,” Ferriere says. “It is sourced from Libya and has just arrived.”
Slippery and cold, the rock feels unlike anything from Earth. Placing a palm against its surface is a surreal and giddy experience.
From here on, the museum begins investigating the beginnings of life on our planet. The exhibition delineates how “life started producing oxygen around 3.5 billion years ago,” pumping enough for the next billion years to change the planet’s chemistry and creating the banded iron formations we can now find in ancient ocean rocks.
This area is replete with fossils, some of which look otherworldly. The displays have brass inscriptions on the ground revealing how many millions of years the fossils date back. The section concludes with The Great Dying, when most marine and land species perished. The event took place 252 million years ago and is deemed the worst mass extinction in Earth’s history. However, it did clear the way for increasing biodiversity.
The next gallery enters this phase, the Mesozoic Era. This covers some 186 million years, segmented into the Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous periods.
It is in this section that we find the dinosaurs, roaming, scavenging and fighting – and, most of all, growing with each period. “Ecological pressure and sexual selection helped push this growth,” Manning says. “As your plant eaters get bigger, so too do the predators. Otherwise, the predators can't do their job, and you get this arms race, literally, between predator and prey.”
The dramatic flair with which the bones have been assembled helps convey the tension of this period. Every scene has been constructed with rigorous scientific backing, using clues left on the bones themselves, such as bite marks revealing causes of death or fractures that tell a story.
“Just weaving those together is actually really tough to do,” Manning says. “Because you're choreographing skeletons which come often from different parts, or different suppliers, and you're having to work out how they will fit together in a public display.”
There is one display that Manning treasures the most, featuring two Deinonychuses closing in on their prey, a Tenontosaurus. The scene was inspired by an image by Raul Martin, a Spanish illustrator specialising in paleoart, or artworks related to palaeontology.
“He did a beautiful pen and ink of two deinonychuses attacking a Tenontosaurus. The image inspired me 25 years ago,” Manning says. “I was able to recreate that moment here, which makes me very happy. I can't wait for Raul to see that image. He'll hopefully cry a little bit because I did when I saw his painting. So it's about emotion. We want to get people feeling that moment.”
The meteorite that killed off the dinosaurs is represented at the end of the gallery with long light rods that plummet towards the gallery floor in a blazing blue and orange glow. From then on, the museum begins to encroach on our time, most fascinatingly recreating Abu Dhabi's Al Dhafra region seven million years ago.
The gallery shows several life-size models of animals that once inhabited the emirate. From grazing four-tusked elephants to sabre-toothed cats leaping towards an ancestor of the gazelle, these display also seem full of life.
Finally, the museum explores today's world, and it does so in wonderful depth, covering global biomes, including the African savannah, as well as local environments, from the desert and the coast to the mountains.
The display that seems impossible to ignore is the 25-metre skeleton of a female blue whale. The piece is so large that a wall had to be knocked down and rebuilt for it to be installed in the gallery.
A section on the future, emphasising the need for environmentally conscious attitudes and practices to protect the planet and its biodiversity, will reportedly be ready when the museum opens on Saturday.
Lexus LX700h specs
Engine: 3.4-litre twin-turbo V6 plus supplementary electric motor
Power: 464hp at 5,200rpm
Torque: 790Nm from 2,000-3,600rpm
Transmission: 10-speed auto
Fuel consumption: 11.7L/100km
On sale: Now
Price: From Dh590,000
New UK refugee system
- A new “core protection” for refugees moving from permanent to a more basic, temporary protection
- Shortened leave to remain - refugees will receive 30 months instead of five years
- A longer path to settlement with no indefinite settled status until a refugee has spent 20 years in Britain
- To encourage refugees to integrate the government will encourage them to out of the core protection route wherever possible.
- Under core protection there will be no automatic right to family reunion
- Refugees will have a reduced right to public funds
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Wicked: For Good
Director: Jon M Chu
Starring: Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo, Jonathan Bailey, Jeff Goldblum, Michelle Yeoh, Ethan Slater
Rating: 4/5
UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
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Super Rugby play-offs
Quarter-finals
- Hurricanes 35, ACT 16
- Crusaders 17, Highlanders 0
- Lions 23, Sharks 21
- Chiefs 17, Stormers 11
Semi-finals
Saturday, July 29
- Crusaders v Chiefs, 12.35pm (UAE)
- Lions v Hurricanes, 4.30pm
box
COMPANY PROFILE
Company name: Letstango.com
Started: June 2013
Founder: Alex Tchablakian
Based: Dubai
Industry: e-commerce
Initial investment: Dh10 million
Investors: Self-funded
Total customers: 300,000 unique customers every month
Benefits of first-time home buyers' scheme
- Priority access to new homes from participating developers
- Discounts on sales price of off-plan units
- Flexible payment plans from developers
- Mortgages with better interest rates, faster approval times and reduced fees
- DLD registration fee can be paid through banks or credit cards at zero interest rates
Karwaan
Producer: Ronnie Screwvala
Director: Akarsh Khurana
Starring: Irrfan Khan, Dulquer Salmaan, Mithila Palkar
Rating: 4/5
Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere
Director: Scott Cooper
Starring: Jeremy Allen White, Odessa Young, Jeremy Strong
Rating: 4/5
The Pope's itinerary
Sunday, February 3, 2019 - Rome to Abu Dhabi
1pm: departure by plane from Rome / Fiumicino to Abu Dhabi
10pm: arrival at Abu Dhabi Presidential Airport
Monday, February 4
12pm: welcome ceremony at the main entrance of the Presidential Palace
12.20pm: visit Abu Dhabi Crown Prince at Presidential Palace
5pm: private meeting with Muslim Council of Elders at Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque
6.10pm: Inter-religious in the Founder's Memorial
Tuesday, February 5 - Abu Dhabi to Rome
9.15am: private visit to undisclosed cathedral
10.30am: public mass at Zayed Sports City – with a homily by Pope Francis
12.40pm: farewell at Abu Dhabi Presidential Airport
1pm: departure by plane to Rome
5pm: arrival at the Rome / Ciampino International Airport
Dubai Bling season three
Cast: Loujain Adada, Zeina Khoury, Farhana Bodi, Ebraheem Al Samadi, Mona Kattan, and couples Safa & Fahad Siddiqui and DJ Bliss & Danya Mohammed
Rating: 1/5
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Breast cancer in men: the facts
1) Breast cancer is men is rare but can develop rapidly. It usually occurs in those over the ages of 60, but can occasionally affect younger men.
2) Symptoms can include a lump, discharge, swollen glands or a rash.
3) People with a history of cancer in the family can be more susceptible.
4) Treatments include surgery and chemotherapy but early diagnosis is the key.
5) Anyone concerned is urged to contact their doctor
Indoor cricket in a nutshell
Indoor cricket in a nutshell
Indoor Cricket World Cup - Sept 16-20, Insportz, Dubai
16 Indoor cricket matches are 16 overs per side
8 There are eight players per team
9 There have been nine Indoor Cricket World Cups for men. Australia have won every one.
5 Five runs are deducted from the score when a wickets falls
4 Batsmen bat in pairs, facing four overs per partnership
Scoring In indoor cricket, runs are scored by way of both physical and bonus runs. Physical runs are scored by both batsmen completing a run from one crease to the other. Bonus runs are scored when the ball hits a net in different zones, but only when at least one physical run is score.
Zones
A Front net, behind the striker and wicketkeeper: 0 runs
B Side nets, between the striker and halfway down the pitch: 1 run
C Side nets between halfway and the bowlers end: 2 runs
D Back net: 4 runs on the bounce, 6 runs on the full
Match info
Manchester United 1
Fred (18')
Wolves 1
Moutinho (53')
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Who was Alfred Nobel?
The Nobel Prize was created by wealthy Swedish chemist and entrepreneur Alfred Nobel.
- In his will he dictated that the bulk of his estate should be used to fund "prizes to those who, during the preceding year, have conferred the greatest benefit to humankind".
- Nobel is best known as the inventor of dynamite, but also wrote poetry and drama and could speak Russian, French, English and German by the age of 17. The five original prize categories reflect the interests closest to his heart.
- Nobel died in 1896 but it took until 1901, following a legal battle over his will, before the first prizes were awarded.
Batti Gul Meter Chalu
Producers: KRTI Productions, T-Series
Director: Sree Narayan Singh
Cast: Shahid Kapoor, Shraddha Kapoor, Divyenndu Sharma, Yami Gautam
Rating: 2/5
The specs
Price, base / as tested Dh12 million
Engine 8.0-litre quad-turbo, W16
Gearbox seven-speed dual clutch auto
Power 1479 @ 6,700rpm
Torque 1600Nm @ 2,000rpm 0-100kph: 2.6 seconds 0-200kph: 6.1 seconds
Top speed 420 kph (governed)
Fuel economy, combined 35.2L / 100km (est)
The specs
Engine: 2.0-litre four-cylinder turbo
Power: 268hp at 5,600rpm
Torque: 380Nm at 4,800rpm
Transmission: CVT auto
Fuel consumption: 9.5L/100km
On sale: now
Price: from Dh195,000
SPEC%20SHEET%3A%20SAMSUNG%20GALAXY%20Z%20FOLD5
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Company profile
Name: Thndr
Started: October 2020
Founders: Ahmad Hammouda and Seif Amr
Based: Cairo, Egypt
Sector: FinTech
Initial investment: pre-seed of $800,000
Funding stage: series A; $20 million
Investors: Tiger Global, Beco Capital, Prosus Ventures, Y Combinator, Global Ventures, Abdul Latif Jameel, Endure Capital, 4DX Ventures, Plus VC, Rabacap and MSA Capital