Walk Through Time On to new beginningsWalk Through Time in the US is being transferred to the Hero's Journey Foundation. Contact Geoff Ainscow at gbainscow at gmail.com and visit http://herosjourneyfoundation.org OverviewImagine taking a one-mile walk where every step transports you a million years in time! A Walk Through Time... from stardust to us, takes you on just such a journey. In a series of 90 panels of text and illustrations, this innovative traveling exhibit tells the story of life’s five-billion-year evolution. Developed at Hewlett-Packard Labs and gifted to Foundation for Global Community this beautiful and awe-inspiring experience has been presented throughout the world so that organizations and individuals can use it as a meaningful context for identifying and addressing the most critical issues of the future. The worldwide ownership is now with Stiftung Drittes Millennium in Switzerland and Conexions is the US Distributor. Walk Through Time can also be experienced in book form, and online. Our ProgramsWalk Thought Time exhibit - Conexions is dedicated to making the Walk Through Time 90-panel exhibit available to organizations including educational institutions, museums, businesses, botanical gardens, municipalities, groups, and indivuduals. Please contact us for more information. The Walk Through Time book - This beautiful 224-page hardcover book was published in 1998, spans five billion years of evolution and contains more than 130 colorful illustrations. The book features an absorbing narrative written by mathematical cosmologist Brian Swimme and evolutionary biologist Elisabet Sahtouris and includes the timeline of key stages in the evolutionary drama that is presented in the physical exhibit. The book has been used as an educational tool at several US Universities. Please click here for more information on the book or to purchase the book. Walk Through Time Online - offers those who are unable to visit the physical exhibit an opportunity to experience this dramatic story. The virtual experience has been specially formatted to offer online visitors a compelling interaction with the material contained in the original 90-panel exhibit. |
|