The Enchanting World of Israeli Natural History

Lee Saunders 28/08/2018

While you may think of the well-known Natural History Museums of New York or London, Tel Aviv has made a stunningly impressive start to showcase the natural history and biodiversity of the region and the wider world, with the opening of the Steinhardt Museum of Natural History.

Open to the public from this September, this innovative new museum has embraced a hands-on  multimedia and touch-screen approach and is expected to become an important cultural attraction for thousands of families, school children, nature lovers, tourists and scientists from around the world.

Next to Tel Aviv University, the intriguing five-story building has been uniquely designed to resemble a unique treasure chest, covering more than 9,620 square meters of exhibits, display spaces of 5.7 million items and 12 research laboratories for the museum’s scientists.

museum building

The Steinhardt Museum of Natural History – Credit: Oz Rittner

The architect – Michal Kimmel-Eshkelot  – created the museum’s façade, by installing a ‘treasure chest’ raised above street level. After the building’s completion, it was also described as striking a resemblance to Noah’s Ark – a storehouse of nature’s treasures for future generations.

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And a storehouse it is as you can stroll through nine themed exhibition galleries. Learn about the fascinating Great Bird Migration, and how Israel is a center of migration for 500 million birds, each year using Israel as a land bridge between Europe, Asia and Africa. The creepy and exciting Bugs and Beyond exhibition includes 17 terrariums housing live insects and other creepy crawlies, such as the Madagascar hissing cockroach, Australian walking stick, predatory flea and American grasshopper, as well as different species of spiders, butterflies and ants. The Human Impact exhibition is an interactive digital exhibition that shows how people have influenced nature and biodiversity in Israel, through visual demonstration of the consequences for the landscapes of Israel and the surrounding region during the past 200 years. The thought-provoking Web of Life exhibition looks at the interconnection of our world and the natural world through the use of an acacia tree – a source of life for the gray wolf, caracal and spiny-tailed lizard, among others.

Desert Habitat and Web of Life Exhibits

Desert Habitat and Web of Life exhibits – Credit: Itai Bennet

From the sandy desert of the Negev, to the peaks of Mount Hermon, the Israel’s Landscapes exhibition explores the impressive range of habitats in Israel, and contains six large dioramas of over 120 display items including the greater Egyptian gerbil, European snow vole and desert hedgehog.

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Learn about some of the millions of specimen that reflect the natural history of Israel and the surrounding region, and hear the story of biodiversity in Israel and the Middle East over the last few hundred years. Many of the items on display in Treasures of Biodiversity include species that have become extinct, including a bear, an Asiatic cheetah, the last leopard from Beit Horon and the last crocodile from the Taninim River, all of which belong to the Schmitz collection, predatory birds and other unique birds, including the only albatross spotted in Israel’s skies.

American Friends of Tel Aviv University president and CEO Gail Reiss said: “We hope and believe that, in addition to being a great research institution, the museum will become a tourist destination on par with Tel Aviv itself.” After my own personal visit there, it is well on its way.

collection

Father Schmidt Collection – Credit: Shai Ben Efraim

Take a short ride north from the Dan Tel Aviv or the Link Hotel & Hub for a fascinating, insightful and humbling experience reminding of our place in the ecosystem, the visit the Steinhardt Museum of Natural History, at 12 Klausner Street, Tel Aviv. After its trial run in June and July, the museum will permanently open its doors to the general public and school trips, offering workshops and group tours from September 2018.