The 30-minute show in the digital dome flies us over the San Andreas fault, dives into the planet’s interior, and rewinds us to 1906 San Francisco and further back to 200 million years ago before the break-up of Pangaea, the Earth’s supercontinent — which was the conglomerate of all of the planet’s land masses before earthquakes set the continents adrift.
“By showing visitors the science that underlies these natural events, we want to help them understand how the great movements of the continents have produced the landscape we call home today and the life around us.”
So the show, narrated by Bay Area native Benjamin Bratt, describes the intersection of geological time and human time. This is most excitingly shown when we observe the plates that caused the earth to move and the ground to crack in a wave that reached the ferry building clock tower and rolls up Market street as houses fall, fires spread and horses flee.
This street-view recreation may actually be the coolest — if not the most educational — part of the production. At other times, we see continents drift and fault lines creep across a spinning earth. It’s not the wild virtual space travel that visitors experienced in A Fragile Planet, which took us light years out into space. But it’s an impressive view of sub-planetary commotion.
In the Shake House, an updated version of one of the Academy’s most popular past exhibits, visitors enter the parlor of a Victorian House furnished with bookcases, chandeliers, a china cabinet and a view of the Painted Ladies. House guests first experience the 15 second, 6.9 magnitude Loma Prieta earthquake of 1989 (with sounds of the World Series in the background) and a 30-second version of the 7.9 magnitude 1906 San Francisco quake. In fact that quake lasted 90 seconds, but we get the idea.
The exhibition continues with a view from inside the Earth; revealing the inner molten core and the outer core in 25-foot-diameter model of the Earth. There are interactive stations, touchable rocks and minerals and… baby ostriches! The squadron of newly hatched ostrich chicks are here to provide the cutest possible way to understand continental drift. The ancestors of these flightless birds rafted atop floating landmasses and are scattered today in continents thousands of miles apart.
In the Are you Prepared? nook, Californians can remind themselves of all the earthquake supplies they’ve been meaning to get. Learn about the dos and don’ts of post-earthquake etiquette: Can you drink your toilet water. (No.) Can you drink from your water heater? (Heck yes.) A computer game (soon to be online) has been made by high schoolers to help you pack your emergency back pack. If you drag the make up kit icon into your backpack icon, your are so totally not prepared.
I know I’m so totally prepared because I keep donating to KQED and getting those hand-crank radio flashlights.
All photos courtesy California Academy of Sciences.
Earthquake opened May 25, 2012 at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco. For tickets and information visit calacademy.org.