Ottawa Citizen

ANIMALS COME UP FROM BASEMENT AT ISRAEL MUSEUM

- ODED BALILTY

The hyena, pelican and monkey had never met before they were frozen in time in a Noah’s Ark of formaldehy­de.

For decades they resided below ground at Tel Aviv University.

The creatures were meticulous­ly labelled and maintained under a steady temperatur­e to preserve them for research purposes.

But the animals never did appear to be dead in the room with little air or daylight. They were stuffed into poses taken from the lives they once lived. A bear seemed to prowl the room, as a cheetah looked like it was chasing its prey.

Part of the collection is from German naturalist and Catholic priest Ernst Johann Schmitz, who lived in the Holy Land about a century ago, and it includes animals that are no longer seen in the region.

Last month, the long-dead animals surfaced — reincarnat­ed as exhibits at Israel’s new natural history museum, which is set to open in July. The ultra-modern ark-shaped edifice is set alongside the university campus and houses more than 5.5 million specimens of species from around the globe.

But the Steinhardt Museum of Natural History places special emphasis on the flora and fauna indigenous to the Holy Land and Middle East.

The museum’s curators say the institutio­n aims to raise public awareness about the natural world and environmen­t by highlighti­ng both the country’s ecological diversity at the crossroads of three continents, and the devastatio­n wrought by modern developmen­t.

The museum’s single exhibit on human evolution is situated on the top floor, allowing any visitors who may find the subject objectiona­ble for religious reasons to easily bypass it.

 ?? PHOTOS: ODED BALILTY/ AP ?? A collection of taxidermy specimens stored undergroun­d at Tel Aviv University will soon be on display to the public.
PHOTOS: ODED BALILTY/ AP A collection of taxidermy specimens stored undergroun­d at Tel Aviv University will soon be on display to the public.
 ?? ODED BALILTY / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A cheetah stalking its prey, a dolphin skeleton, and a bear on the prowl are some of the specimens representi­ng flora and fauna indigenous to the Middle East.
ODED BALILTY / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A cheetah stalking its prey, a dolphin skeleton, and a bear on the prowl are some of the specimens representi­ng flora and fauna indigenous to the Middle East.

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