Sunday 29 November 2015

The Red Zone


A specimen of orbicular granite in the Lasting Impressions gallery

Once you ride up through the globe, from the Earth Hall at the Natural History Museum, you enter an area of the museum now known as the Red Zone and, just following a sign, I set off into the Power Within gallery, where I would learn some more about volcanoes and earthquakes.


The Power Within gallery

Again, the time available to explore the Red Zone was limited and, only stopping to photograph specimens that I found particularly interesting – such as the melted glass items retrieved after a devastating pyroclastic flow, when Mt. PelĂ©e erupted  in 1902 – I moved on to take a very quick look at the Restless Surface gallery.


The Restless Surface gallery

This wasn’t my favourite part of the museum, with too much emphasis on the graphics and interactive displays for my liking, but a large polished slice of a course conglomerate particularly caught my eye, as well as a slab of rock that was crammed full of brachiopods.


The Earth's Treasury gallery

Moving down a level, the Earth’s Treasury gallery contains many more minerals, particularly cut and polished gemstones and also places emphasis on their economic value and the practical applications of some of the metals that have been extracted from them.


The From the Beginning gallery

The last gallery that I visited was From The Beginning but I didn’t stay around long enough to look at the specimens in any detail and, returning to the ground floor and passing through the Lasting Impressions gallery - where I saw fine examples of orbicular granite and petrified wood – I made my way to the bookshop...