Preview
Description
The fossil record offers a narrow window through which we try to glimpse vast vistas. Beings with hard parts have favored histories. Dates of evolutionary events are known to varying degrees of accuracy.
Life is a story of permanence and change. Exuberant and innovative, it is also deeply conservative. Traditions and relationships of life today provide clues to the past. DNA is a tangled repository of ancient history; its sequences reveal the presence of the past. Like evolutionary wax tablets, they reveal layers of time and change.
Evolution connotes "change" over time, not "progress." How recently an organism evolved does not define its "worth." While some organisms may be more specialized or complex, all share an equally long evolutionary history.
Evolution is not linear. Organisms and species do not just evolve or become extinct – they also anastomose (fuse together). In profoundly moving ways, life often grows in on itself, bringing previously-evolved beings together into new partnerships.
Date Created
1997
Holding Institution
University of Montana--Missoula. Environmental Studies Program
Rights Statement
Rights Holder
© 1997 Stiftung Drittes Millennium
Item Type
Exhibit
Digital File Format
image/jpeg
Media Type
Text; Image
Digital Image Number
03_wtt_file01_1-19.jpg
Recommended Citation
Liebes, Sid; Mittelstadt, Laurie; Waugh, Barbara; and Brynes, Lois, "Panel 03: Deep-Time Terrain: What To Take With You, What To Leave Behind" (1997). A Walk Through Time - From Stardust To Us. 1.
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/awalkthroughtime/1