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Whale skeleton rebuilt at Cambridge University museum | Whale skeleton rebuilt at Cambridge University museum |
(35 minutes later) | |
A giant whale skeleton dismantled and put into storage for three years during a museum refurbishment has been put back together, bone by bone. | A giant whale skeleton dismantled and put into storage for three years during a museum refurbishment has been put back together, bone by bone. |
The 70ft (21m) finback arrived at Cambridge University's Zoology department 150 years ago, after washing up dead on a Sussex beach. | The 70ft (21m) finback arrived at Cambridge University's Zoology department 150 years ago, after washing up dead on a Sussex beach. |
It was taken down from display when the Museum of Zoology closed in 2013 for a £4m makeover. | It was taken down from display when the Museum of Zoology closed in 2013 for a £4m makeover. |
Re-assembling and re-hanging the whale took two people about four weeks. | Re-assembling and re-hanging the whale took two people about four weeks. |
The finback (Balaeonoptera physalus) - the second largest species after the blue whale - is thought to have weighed about 80 tonnes, the equivalent of eight double-decker buses, when it was alive. | The finback (Balaeonoptera physalus) - the second largest species after the blue whale - is thought to have weighed about 80 tonnes, the equivalent of eight double-decker buses, when it was alive. |
More on this story and other news from Cambridgeshire | More on this story and other news from Cambridgeshire |
It washed up in Pevensey Bay on 14 November, 1865, after a storm. | It washed up in Pevensey Bay on 14 November, 1865, after a storm. |
The mammal was sold at auction for £38 to 10 local fisherman who cut it up under the guidance of William Henry Flower, conservator of the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons. | The mammal was sold at auction for £38 to 10 local fisherman who cut it up under the guidance of William Henry Flower, conservator of the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons. |
Mr Flower told Cambridge University about the "magnificent skeleton", and the department bought it, finally putting it on public display 30 years later. | Mr Flower told Cambridge University about the "magnificent skeleton", and the department bought it, finally putting it on public display 30 years later. |
For years it took centre-stage, dwarfing the museum's four million other specimens, including the skeleton of a Dodo and many animals collected by naturalist Charles Darwin. | For years it took centre-stage, dwarfing the museum's four million other specimens, including the skeleton of a Dodo and many animals collected by naturalist Charles Darwin. |
However, it was consigned to storage boxes for three years until being put back together and re-hung in a new glass display area. | However, it was consigned to storage boxes for three years until being put back together and re-hung in a new glass display area. |
Putting it back together took "a lot of patience, a lot of effort and a lot of labour", collections manager Matt Lowe said. | |
"It's really iconic, it's 150 years old - exactly the same age as the museum itself," he added. | "It's really iconic, it's 150 years old - exactly the same age as the museum itself," he added. |
Whale-watchers will be able to appreciate the whale's sheer scale when the museum reopens to the public next summer. | Whale-watchers will be able to appreciate the whale's sheer scale when the museum reopens to the public next summer. |
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