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by Stuart Blackman

CLOSING BELL

Long Live the Dodo!
A museum model of Raphus cucullatus has more life in it than any stuffed bird


The Scientist 2004, 18(6):60

Published 29 March 2004

I have never thought stuffed birds make good museum exhibits. A stuffed bird looks exactly that – stuffed. Compared to mammals or arthropods, birds lack physical diversity; their behavior and song are far more interesting, but neither survives the stuffing process. Which is why, on childhood trips to London's Natural History Museum, I'd always hurry through the bird gallery to get to the insects beyond (dead insects are nearly as good as live ones). However, one particular avian exhibit would always slow me down.


 

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