Tag Archives: Museums

Science ceramics – the perfect gift for the geek in your life!

Over at the Dynamic Ecology blog, Jeremy Fox has provided a link to a company called Not Quite Past that uses AI to generate an image for a ceramic tile in the style of Dutch Delftware based on the prompts that you give it. That part is free, but if you wish the company will then manufacture that tile and ship it to you (though there’s a minimum order of 10 tiles).

It reminded me that when I was working in China earlier this year, we visited the extraordinary Museum of Chengjiang Fossils, dedicated to an amazing assemblage of early Cambrian-age animals. This biota is comparable to the more famous Burgess Shale fauna in Canada: both are in excess of 500 million years old, and they share some animals in common.

One such taxon is the genus Anomalocaris, a group of predatory early arthropods, the disarticulated parts of which were originally misidentified as belonging to different animals. It was the late Stephen J. Gould who first brought the story to popular attention in his 1989 book Wonderful Life. I read this when it was first published and had the pleasure of seeing Gould give a lecture about it in Oxford, and the story of Anomalocaris stuck with me. So it was great to see actual fossils of this remarkable animal in China.

Not only did I get to view the fossils, but I was able to buy the plate that’s featured at the top of this post, featuring a hand-painted painted Anomalocaris in a traditional Chinese style. It’s perhaps the most geeky ceramic imaginable, though Jeremy’s Daphnia tile comes a close second!

Here’s some more photos from the Chengjiang Museum, including sculptures of both Anomalocaris and the similarly mis-reconstructed Hallucigenia: