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More than 100 items in the exhibit illuminate this rich heritage, including fossils, historical manuscripts, paintings, coins, musical instruments, implements of daily use, religious artifacts and more.
Below is a PBS interview with Dr. Donald Johanson in which he describes his discovery of Lucy.
Learn More...
→BecomingHuman.org
→eLucy.org
→Burke Museum
A Land of Kings
This exciting exhibit consists of two segments. Part one begins with the story of ancient Ethiopia and the Kingdom of Aksum. According to tradition, the son of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba, King Menelik became the founder of the Solomonic dynasty. The story starts with the kingdom of Aksum in the northern highlands of the country. During a period of roughly seven centuries, a succession of kings ruled a territory that covered large portions of present-day Ethiopia as well as neighboring Eritrea and portions of Yemen. This section follows the country's rise in religious, economic and cultural power through the centuries, and ends with modern Ethiopia and the end of the reign of Emperor Haile Selassie I.
A Country of Discoveries
The second part of the exhibit examines the many species of early hominid that called Ethiopia home, culminating with the display of the world's most famous fossil, Lucy. The Lucy exhibition at the Ethiopian Natural History Museum in the capital, Addis Ababa, is a replica, the real remains are usually locked in a vault. Emphasis on geographic and chronological context will set the stage to tell the story of our ancestors. A wide variety of multi-media presentations and text panels will also elaborate on what anthropologists do, and how we get from finding a fossil to telling a story such as the one we will present in this exhibit.
Visitors will not only have the opportunity to come face-to-face with Lucy, but also meet with the earliest known members of our own species, Homo sapiens, who lived almost 200,000 years ago in what is now Ethiopia. Other important paleoanthropological discoveries will also be represented to complete the current account of human evolution as known to scientists today.
Lucy's Legacy: The Hidden
Treasures of Ethiopia is an international
exhibition
organized by The Houston Museum of Natural Science
in collaboration
with the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of the
Federal Democratic Republic
of Ethiopia and the Ethiopian Exhibition
Coordinating Committee.
National funding for Lucy's Legacy: The Hidden
Treasures of Ethiopia
is provided by Ethiopian Airlines and The Smith
Foundation.
The exhibition's presentation in Seattle has been
made possible in part by the
Mayor's Office of Arts & Cultural Affairs, City
of Seattle and King County.
The Seattle Times and Seattle Post Intelligence
are the official print sponsors of the Seattle
exhibit.
IMAX® is a
registered trademark of the IMAX
Corporation.

