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Southampton dinosaur exhibition unearths region's history

Southampton dinosaur exhibition unearths region's history

BBC News04-04-2025
A free exhibition that tells the story of the south of England, from Jurassic dinosaurs through to early humans, has opened.The University of Southampton's Hidden in Stone, which features a cast of Dorset fossil hunter Mary Anning's Plesiosaurus, can be visited at the city's God's House Tower for eight weeks.It showcases dozens of specimens from Lyme Regis in the west, across the Isle of Wight to Hastings in the east, and north into Hampshire.Exhibition lead professor Neil Gostling said he hoped it would inspire the next generation of scientists.
University paleobiologists and archaeologists have been working with artists, including Anthony Hutchings, to transport visitors back across the past 200 million years of life, normally hidden in stone.Prof Gostling, who is an associate professor in evolution and palaeobiology at the university, said Jurassic marine reptiles like pliosaurs were "cruising the waters over what is now Dorset"."In more recent times, we see near tropical temperatures, with turtles and crocodiles in the water, large flightless birds, ancestors of horses, and hippo-like animals," he said."In the last half a million years, another more familiar type of animal arrived - humans, and prehistory starts to become history, our own story."
A full-size replica of the Kimmeridge Pliosaur skull – which featured along with Dr Gostling in the BBC special Attenborough and the Giant Sea Monster - will be seen for the first time outside The Etches Collection of Jurassic Marine Life.Skulls of herbivorous iguanodontids, and carnivorous spinosaurs, alongside casts of ichthyosaurs and Anning's plesiosaurus will join the skull of a woolly rhino.Early human artefacts such as flints and worked bone, along with dozens of other pieces including shark teeth, are also featured.Karen Fawcett, a wildlife and paleo artist who created several bespoke sculptures for the exhibition, said she had to "extend" her knowledge of living birds, reptiles and mammals, to recreate the extinct creatures and "capture the essence of the real thing".
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Ancient 250-mile mystery blob is headed straight for New York City
Ancient 250-mile mystery blob is headed straight for New York City

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Ancient 250-mile mystery blob is headed straight for New York City

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Scots chemist believes drugs to treat Alzheimer's will be available in five years
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Daily Record

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Scots chemist believes drugs to treat Alzheimer's will be available in five years

Professor David MacMillan won the Nobel Prize in 2021. A Scots chemist believes drugs to treat Alzheimer's disease will be available within five years. ‌ Professor David MacMillan, 57, who is originally from North Lanarkshire, said "phenomenal things" are happening within medical research into neurological diseases. ‌ He won a Nobel Prize after developing a new way of building molecules, leading to developments in drugs for Alzheimer's, cancer and heart disease. ‌ MacMillan told the BBC: "I would bet my house that within five years that we have marketed drugs for Alzheimer's. "My father died of vascular dementia and my aunt had dementia. I think that's such a horrible way to go." ‌ The Princeton University professor said winning the Nobel Prize in 2021 has made a massive impact on his life. "On a Tuesday morning, I was a chemist that nobody, including half my pals, had been interested in talking to," he said. "Then on the Wednesday, I was talking to like the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. "It was crazy - and I thought it would slow down but it just keeps on going." MacMillan was awarded a half share of £842,611 and used it to set up The May and Billy MacMillan Foundation, named after his parents, where he funds Scottish students, providing educational opportunities to underprivileged young people.

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