The Robot Zoo June 8- Sept 7

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Robot-Zoo-Ad-294x300Quick Fact Sheet

Exhibit Title: The Robot Zoo
A traveling children’s exhibit that reveals the biomechanics of giant robot animals to illustrate how real animals work. (2,500 square foot interactive exhibit)

Itinerary:

The Kley Exhibit Hall at Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden welcomes it’s first traveling exhibit. Zoo visitors can explore The Robot Zoo daily from June 8 -September 7, 2015. Cost is $2.00 (or 2 tokens) to enhance your zoo visit with this unique exhibit experience.

Tongue Gun – Triggering a joystick on the model of a robot chameleon’s head fires a long tongue at insect targets to show how the reptile catches food.

Hide and Seek – Children can blend in like a chameleon. Wearing a coat that matches a wall in the background, kids can watch themselves appear and disappear on a video monitor.

Swat the Fly – This activity tests participants’ reaction time (about one-twelfth as fast a house fly’s). Visitors use their hands to “swat” each fly as it lights up.

Sticky Feet – Kids, wearing special hand and kneepads, can try to stick like flies to a sloping surface.

Robot Animals: Chameleon, Platypus, and Housefly

Highlights:

Three robot animals and eight hands-on activities reveal the magic of nature as a master engineer.

Engaging Interactives

Chameleon

1. Keep an Eye on You

The robot model of a chameleon’s head shows how the real reptile views the world: through eyes that work independently. As visitors move each of the robot’s eyes with a joystick, they can see on two color monitors the separate images the robot’s eyes “see.”

2. Tongue Gun

Triggering the Tongue Gun demonstrates how a real chameleon shoots out its long, sticky-tipped tongue to reel in a meal. Sharpshooters use a joystick to aim the head of a robot chameleon, then press a button to fire its long tongue at one of several insect targets.

3. Hide and Seek

Visitors can blend in like a chameleon. Wearing a coat that matches a wall in the background, visitors can watch themselves appear and disappear on a video monitor as they move back and forth in front of the wall.

Platypus

4. Mister Platypus

Visitors of all ages can build a platypus or their own whimsical creature by adding different animal parts, such as an alligator’s tail or an elephant’s trunk, to the model of a platypus’ body

5. Robot Body Shop

Drum mounted machine parts allow visitors to manipulate some of the mechanical devices used to construct the robots, such as hinges, pumps, springs and shock absorbers.

Housefly

6. Eye to Eye

Visitors can stand behind a 5-foot-tall cutout of a housefly and get a fly’s-eye view through two 19-inch compound eyes. A real housefly can’t see fine details unless it’s up close, but its eyes (each with about 4,000 six-sided lenses) can detect even the slightest movement in all directions.

7. Swat the Fly

This activity tests participants’ reaction time (about one-twelfth as fast as a housefly’s). Visitors use their hands to “swat” the backlit image of each fly as it randomly flashes.

8. Sticky Feet

Visitors wearing special hand and kneepads can try to stick like flies to a sloping surface.