The New Zealand Herald

Where Jurassic Park got it wrong

Hologram exhibit to feature feathered, colourful dinosaurs

- Jurassic Park Jurassic Park Jurassic Park — AP

Forget the grey, green and brown dinosaurs in the movies. Palaeontol­ogist Jack Horner wants to transport people back in time to see a feathered Tyrannosau­rus rex coloured bright red and a blue triceratop­s with red fringe similar to a rooster’s comb.

Horner, who consulted with director Steven Spielberg on the

films, is developing a three-dimensiona­l hologram exhibit that will showcase the latest theories on what dinosaurs looked like. He is working with entertainm­ent company Base Hologram to create an exhibit that will let people feel as though they’re on an archaeolog­ical dig, inside a laboratory and surrounded by dinosaurs in the wild.

“I’m always trying to figure out a good way to get the science of palaeontol­ogy across to the general public,” Horner said.

“Like taking them into the field or taking them into my laboratory and then using the technology that we have to show people what dinosaurs were really like.”

That understand­ing of what dinosaurs looked like has changed a lot since the original in 1993. For example, researcher­s now believe dinosaurs were much more bird-like than lizard-like, and scientists studying dinosaur skulls have found keratin, a substance that gives birds their bright colours.

“We can see at least areas that could be vividly coloured, very much like birds, and there’s no reason to make them different from birds,” Horner said.

Horner and Base Hologram workers have been developing the exhibit’s story line for a couple of months, with plans to have multiple travelling exhibits ready to launch by the northern spring 2019. The company wants to place them in museums, science centres and other institutio­ns where they might spur debate among scientists who don’t share the theory that dinosaurs were colourful, feathered creatures.

“The controvers­y is okay because it makes people talk,” said Base Hologram executive vice-president Michael Swinney.

Live performanc­es using holograms have gained attention in recent years, notably through concerts that feature likenesses of dead performers such as Michael Jackson and Tupac Shakur.

Until now, Base Hologram, a subsidiary of the live entertainm­ent company Base Entertainm­ent, has used the technology to put on concerts by late singers Roy Orbison and Maria Callas. As the field becomes more competitiv­e, the company is seeking new areas to apply the technology, such as science, CEO Brian Becker says.

Horner previously worked with Microsoft to create his dinosaur holograms that can be used with virtual and augmented reality technologi­es.

He noted the technology used in the exhibit could be applied even more broadly, including by palaeontol­ogists in their labs.

“What we do now is, when we want to envision something, we get an artist to paint it,” Horner said. “Now, we’re going to be able to create a 3-D immersive experience a lot better than a painting.”

 ??  ?? Researcher­s now theorise dinosaurs were more bird-like than lizard-like.
Researcher­s now theorise dinosaurs were more bird-like than lizard-like.
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