Multimedia Gallery
Ancient Denvers - Long Neck Meadow
Ancient Denvers - Long Neck Meadow. Time period: 150 million-years-ago in the Late Jurassic (Mesozoic). A herd of Apatosaurs moves slowly through a waist-high tangle of ferns and Zamites, grazing on succulent branch tips and leaves as the morning mist begins to clear. This is a time before grass and flowering plants, a time when the planet hosts a suite of unusual plants that will be extinct by the end of the age of dinosaurs. More commonly known as Brontosaurus, Apatosaurus reverted to its original scientific name after paleontologists discovered that O.C. Marsh -- in his haste to name more species than his nemesis E.D. Cope -- had accidentally named the same species twice. [Text used by permission, Denver Museum of Nature & Science.]
This image is from "Ancient Denvers," an exhibition of paintings at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science depicting the Denver area as it looked during the various phases of our Earths geologic past. Using evidence from the core's rocks and sediment, and from geologic evidence gathered in other parts of the area, museum scientists, working with local artists, recreated several ancient Denver landscapes that depict Denver's amazingly varied past.
The "Ancient Denvers" paintings were funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation (grant EAR 9805474). (Date of Image: 2002)
The Artists
The artwork in the "Ancient Denvers" exhibit includes the combined talents of three experienced artists:
--Donna Braginetz is known for her precise renderings of dinosaurs and other ancient life. She painted the first of the "Ancient Denvers" landscapes -- a reconstruction of the site of Denver International Airport as it looked 65 million-years-ago. The painting and the public's response to it were the inspiration for expanding the "Ancient Denvers" project to include 13 additional landscapes.
--Gary Staab is a well-known sculptor and painter of prehistoric animals. His work has appeared on the cover of Natural History magazine. Gary is a former employee of the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, where he created a number of sculptures for the "Prehistoric Journey" exhibition.
--Jan Vriesen is a world-renowned painter and muralist. He is best known for painting murals that form the backdrops of museum dioramas. At the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, Jan's work can be seen both in the temporary "Ancient Denvers" exhibition, as well as in the Kansas Coastline diorama of the permanent "Prehistoric Journey" exhibition.
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Credit: All rights reserved, image archives, Denver Museum of Nature & Science (www.dmns.org); painting by Jan Vriesen
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