The Evolution House
Visiting the Evolution House is a fascinating walk through over
3,500 million years of plant evolution.
Three major 'milestones' have been selected to illustrate the incredibly
long history of plant evolution in the space available: the Silurian,
Carboniferous and Cretaceous periods and includes a coal swamp showing
the giant clubmosses and horsetails from 300 million years ago.
Cycads appeared 200 million years ago, followed by conifers and
the flowering plants, which dominate the plant kingdom today.
Exciting effects take visitors through the evolutionary process,
with a fuming volcano and glowing red lava, even dinosaur footprints!
Among the species featured here are stromatolites, Cooksonia
(the first plants that adapted to life on land), liverworts, mosses,
selaginellas, and the first ferns, including the world's largest
horsetail (Equisetum giganteum) and the high-climbing fern
Lygodium, whose fronds can grow to over 30 m (97.5 ft)
long.
The Evolution House is a completely new type of educational-horticultural
display concept, involving landscape immersion techniques. A leaflet
providing further information on the Evolution House is available
inside the glasshouse itself.
Continue the tour
Back
up to: Pagoda Vista Zone
Carry
on to: Temperate House
See also
Kew's
History & Heritage: Evolution House
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