
Last March, the University of Zurich (UZH) merged its four natural sciences museums - the Zoological Museum, the Paleontological Museum, the Museum of Anthropology and the Botanical Museum - into the Natural History Museum. After combining zoological and paleontological elements in a first step, the museum has now added anthropological exhibits to its permanent collection. The new exhibits aim to appeal to children as well as grown-ups interested in science.

The museum’s main areas of focus include Neanderthals, symbolized by an individual dubbed Orsa. Our closest ancestors emerged some 230,000 years ago, their fossils first discovered in the Neander Valley in Germany. Neanderthals also used to roam the area that is now Switzerland, as evidenced by an approx. 50,000-year-old incisor found in a cave in the canton of Jura. The Natural History Museum is now showcasing the life of Neanderthals in an updated digital ice age exhibit, expanded with new material on their closest relatives.

The permanent collection now also includes exhibits on the various forms of movement on two legs, or bipedalism. Ducks and penguins waddle, while kangaroos, jerboas and small birds such as sparrows hop. In contrast, chickens, pigeons and some pangolin species simply walk, whereas humans and ostriches can even run. "Bipedalism may be efficient, but it’s not very stable. This instability is cancelled out by movements of the head or by using the tail or the arms," says Eveline Weissen, former head of the Museum of Anthropology at UZH.

- Sunday, 15 December, 11:30 a.m. ’ Hoppeln, watscheln, gehen - Zweibeiner im Tierreich’
- Thursday, 19 December, 6 p.m. ’Der besondere Zweibeiner - ein Einblick in die menschliche Evolution’
- Thursday 23. January, 6 p.m. ’Zweibeinig im Museum - Wie der Mensch das Laufen lernte’
- Thursday, 6 February, 6 p.m. ’Was uns Schimpansen über den Ursprung der schwierigen Geburt beim Menschen erzählen’