The visitor center is the building on the right, and the resource center, which includes a classroom, lab, office space, and a small library, on the left. Jeff Davis Peak, part of Great Basin National Park, is in the background.
One of the first things you see when you enter the exhibit area is this life-like bristlecone pine tree. It looks very much like the old-growth bristlecone pines found up near the Wheeler cirque and rock glacier at over 10,000 feet high. These trees are known to live over 4,000 years, but only in harsh conditions. In addition, only a small part of the tree is alive, like the exhibit shows.
There's a wall with cultural exhibits, looking at how the Fremont and Shoshone cultures lived. There is also this sheep camp exhibit, complete with the border collie lying underneath it. Kids love looking at the dog.
Another wall has exhibits about the different life zones that are found from the valley floor all the way up to the mountain tops.
Desert Boy was fascinated with the stream exhibit, which was down at his level and had fish. He can say "fish," which probably was part of the reason he liked it so much. I have to admit, having a small child made me look at exhibits in a totally different way.
There were some cutaways that showed what lives in the ground, which in the desert is quite a lot. The sagebrush vole is one of the creatures that hides from the temperature extremes in a burrow.
4 comments:
It is hard to fathom a tree living that long. Great Basin is just another of the places that I have long wanted to visit. Man, I had better get moving!!
Oo, exhibits! Geek out!
Finally! Exhibits! Much better than artistic paintings and photographs hanging on otherwise bare walls.
Did Desert Boy get a haircut?
Can't wait to see the exhibits.
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