Out of that find came a two-year touring exhibition,
Dinosaur Footprints – A Story of Discovery, which featured four recreated footprints from Whanganui Inlet in two triangular display modules with in-built lighting and AV presentation.
Gerard Hindmarsh/Supplied
Dr Greg Browne last weekend at the site of the largest group of dinosaur footprints. This toured around 10 New Zealand museums starting in Auckland and included two months at the Nelson Provincial Museum. For many curious visitors, including thousands of school children, it was their first ‘real’ interactive with a dinosaur. And the curiosity has just kept going. Just three weeks ago, a group from Friends of Te Papa (led by Hamish Campbell and Chris Adams) included some of the footprint sites on their tour of Golden Bay, but they couldn’t have got worse weather.
In his obituary in the Nelson Evening Mail in 1915, Cawthron was described as “the grand old man of Nelson” – and had been the most generous contributor to the city during its early years. Arrivng in Nelson as 15-year-old in 1849 after emigrating with his family from England, Cawthron amassed a fortune as a shipping agent after spending his youth working in the mines during the Australian gold rush in the 1850s.
Cawthron Institute/Supplied
A preliminary early-stage concept of proposed Science and Technology Precinct where the Cawthron Institute s new laboratories could move to in the future. His fingerprints can still be found all over the city, having funded iconic spots such as the church steps in Nelson and the stanchion and chain fence on Rocks Rd by the waterfront.
He has published more than 220 peer-reviewed scientific papers, with many appearing in leading international journals, and he maintains numerous international research collaborations. Perhaps his most prominent work has been as a director of The Dunedin Study for more than 20 years. Known in full as the ‘Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study’, the project began in 1975, originally designed as a short-term project to explore how birth events affect later health. A growing interest in the results, however, enabled continuation of the Study and 45 years on it has become renowned across the world as one of the most significant projects of its kind.
Tuesday, 22 December 2020, 1:09 pm
Nelson City Council’s yearly Heritage Festival has been
renamed to better reflect Nelson’s rich and varied
cultural past.
From next year, the festival will be
called Tuku 21 Whakatū Heritage Month, with the year in the
name changing annually to reflect the event’s place in
history. The new name follows discussions with iwi, who
gifted the name “Tuku”, meaning “to share” or
“exchange” in Te Reo Māori. The name is an expression
of our diverse and unique stories, histories and heritage,
and reflects the value of bi-culturalism within the context
of Aotearoa New Zealand.