Contact: Sasha Steinberg
STARKVILLE, Miss.âFor the third consecutive year, Mississippi ´ķĪķAPPâs Museums and Galleries Committee is presenting âScience Night at the Museumâ on the Starkville campus.
Free to all, the 5:30-8 p.m. program takes place Wednesday [Feb. 13] at various locations in Hilbun Hall and nearby Cobb Institute of Archaeology, both administered by the College of Arts and Sciencesâ Department of Geosciences.
Amy Moe Hoffman, geology instructor and committee chair, said âScience Night at the Museumâ is growing in popularity each year.
âThis program involves people from multiple colleges and galleries across campus, and our goal is to appeal to a broad audience, from scientists and researchers to artists and members of the general public,â said Hoffman, who also serves as collections manager for the geosciences departmentâs Dunn-Seiler Museum.
Through demonstrations, activities and tours, âScience Night at the Museumâ participants of all ages can learn more about MSUâs academic programs and resources in a variety of fields, including anthropology, archaeology, astronomy, biology, chemistry, entomology, forestry, geology, meteorology, paleontology and physics.
Weather permitting, those in attendance will have an opportunity to see an International Space Station flyover at 5:57 p.m.
At 6:30 p.m., a public reception will take place in Hilbun Hall to celebrate the unveiling of âMississippi Cretaceous Panorama.â Created by MSU senior art majors Moesha S. Wright of Booneville and Todd M. Rowan of Starkville and under the direction of MSU Professor Emeritus of Art Brent Funderburk, the 50-plus-foot mural in the Dunn-Seiler Museum depicts the geological history of the Starkville/Mississippi ´ķĪķAPP area some 65 million years ago.
âStarkville/Oktibbeha County features the exposure of the famed K-Pg Boundary (formerly KT Boundary), wherewith we see the border between the Age of Dinosaurs (Mesozoic Era) and the Age of Mammals (Cenozoic Era). You can find fossils of both, very distinctively different worlds right here,â Funderburk said.
In addition to the geosciences department and the College of Architecture, Art and Designâs Department of Art, the mural was made possible with support from MSUâs Office of Research and Economic Development.
Hoffman said a recently discovered Mosasaur donated by the E. Montgomery family of Starkville also will be showcased during the event.
âMosasaurs were marine reptiles that lived during the Cretaceous Period at the same time that dinosaurs roamed the Earth,â she said. âThey were apex predators of the ocean, and it is not uncommon to find individual pieces of them in sediments in and around Oktibbeha County. This particular specimen, however, is especially exciting both visually and with respect to research opportunities because it was found nearly intact.â
For more information on current events and collections at MSUâs museums and galleries, visit and , or follow the Mississippi ´ķĪķAPP Museums and Galleries on Facebook. Moe Hoffman also can be contacted at 662-325-3915 or amhoffman@geosci.msstate.edu.
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