From the Field: Fossil Leaves and Mammals
Thursday, July 14 1:35 pm

AMNH Science Bulletins producer Sandya Viswanathan interviews site co-director Holly Dunsworth and her student Catya Mesyef. Photo courtesy of W. Harcourt-Smith.
Blogging from west Kenya, William Harcourt-Smith, a research associate in the Division of Paleontology, is directing a 20-million-year-old paleontological site on two islands in Lake Victoria. One of these islands, Rusinga, is best known as the site of the discovery of the first fossils of Proconsul, an early ape. Harcourt-Smith’s multidisciplinary team includes physical anthropologists and geologists, and in addition to collecting fossils, researchers are trying to learn more about the evolutionary events and environmental conditions that may have influenced the emergence of Proconsul and other early ape lineages.
Rusinga Island, Kenya, July 12, 2011
It’s late and I’m sitting outside my tent looking across Lake Victoria. There are thousands of tiny lights along the horizon, as far as you can see. It’s the local fishermen using lamps to attract a small species of fish that’s a staple of the local diet. It’s a beautiful sight—something I never tire of seeing.
Yesterday, the crew from Science Bulletins, the Museum’s innovative online and exhibition program, arrived in camp. Led by Sandya Viswanathan, they’re shooting a feature about our projects on Rusinga. Today they filmed the excavations at Kaswanga, and lots of team members spoke to the camera about what they were working on, some for the first time. The piece will eventually go up in the Museum’s Spitzer Hall of Human Origins, and will be syndicated to other institutions around the world. It’s exciting, and personally I’m thrilled, as it will help generate a better understanding of why we are working here and why it’s such a special place. Read more »










