Gallery

Fossil Stingray Teeth

Did you know that stingrays have teeth?

This week’s #DignayanBiyernes features a tiny yet fascinating piece of fossil from the National Paleontological Collection. Let us learn today about the fossilized teeth of a stingray.

This small piece is a fragment of a stingray tooth. It was collected by #NationalMuseumPH researchers from Candoni, Negros Occidental in 2017. This collection was part of the joint fieldwork of the NMP and paleontologists from the National Museum of Nature and Science in Japan. It was found together with many other marine fossils like coral fragments, oyster shells, and various clams and snails. 

In other countries, fossils of stingray teeth are very common. Oftentimes, they are found together with shark teeth. A complete skeleton fossil of a stingray however is quite rare. They are mostly from the older or extinct species of stingray. 

Stingrays are cartilaginous fishes like a shark. This means that their skeleton is not made of bones but cartilage. They are generally marine creatures from tropical or subtropical regions. Their teeth are modified scales that are regularly replaced. Today, different stingray species are becoming more threatened and vulnerable to extinction. The IUCN listed the common stingray as a vulnerable species while a few other species are in much more critical status. 

Find this fossil and more at the Life Through Time Galley of the NMNH. Book your tour through this website.

#MuseumFromHome

#StaySafe

#BeatCOVID19

Text and image by the NMP Geology and Paleontology Division

© National Museum of the Philippines (2022)

SAKAY-SAKAY FESTIVAL of Maasin City, Southern Leyte

As part of our #MuseumFromHome series highlighting the festivals related to the feast of the Santo Niño, your #NationalMuseumPH features the Sakay-Sakay Festival of Maasin City in Southern Leyte. The festival, held every 3rd Sunday of January, consists of a fluvial parade, street dancing competitions and other festive events. 

The celebration traces its origin to the Sinulog Festival commemorating the arrival of the Holy Child’s image to the Philippines when it was gifted by Ferdinand Magellan to Queen Juana, the wife of Rajah Humabon, in 1521. As the celebration of the feast of the Santo Niño spread across the Visayas region, Maasin City held their own version of “sinulog” through the Sakay-Sakay Festival. In the past, the street dancing activities were confined to the city center and culminated in the plaza before the celebration evolved to its current form. 

The Sakay-Sakay Festival now highlights a fluvial parade starting at the Maasin City port, where bancas and pump boats, garbed with colorful banners, flaglets and various images of the Santo Niño, compete against each other for the best decoration. Aboard these boats, dancers sway to drumbeats while carrying small images of the Holy Child. Other activities include the coastal decoration, face painting, and the street dancing competition highlighting an elegantly garbed ‘festival queen’ carrying the image of the Santo Niño during the performance.

With the onset of the pandemic, the local government has canceled the customary activities of the Sakay-Sakay Festival to prevent the spread of COVID-19 infection. As a safer alternative, they held the Sakay-Sakay Festival Throwback Photo Contest in 2021 as a way to keep the spirit of this important event alive among the Maasinhons. 

#SakaySakayFestival 

#MaasinCity 

#SantoNiño

#PhilippineFestival

Text and poster by the NMP Ethnology Division 

Photo courtesy of the City Tourism Office of Maasin

Built Heritage Tradition of the People’s Museum and Library of Bayombong in the Municipality of Bayombong, Nueva Vizcaya

In our #MuseumFromHome series, this week’s feature of our #BuiltTraditionThursday is the People’s Museum and Library of Bayombong, formerly the Old Provincial Capitol Building of the province of Nueva Vizcaya, an Important Cultural Property of the Municipality of Bayombong.

The structure that would come to be known as the People’s Museum and Library was built in 1906, burned in 1926 but was restored, and then rebuilt and renovated after World War II in 1945 to serve as the “Capitol Offices of Nueva Vizcaya”. The property also served to house several ancillary support facilities including Trial Courts, Fiscal Offices, and banking operations. The current structure remains that of the 1945 restoration, and it was adaptively reused from a Capitol Building into the People’s Museum and Library of Bayombong, when a new Capitol was built in 1993. 

A two-storey building, the Museum and Library is located on a lot measuring approximately 1400 square meters and having a building footprint of around 22.15 by 21.9 meters (485 square meters), the lot is bounded by Capt. Dela Cruz Street to the east, Sto. Domingo street to the north, and Burgos Street to the west. The building is also adjacent to several prominent landmarks, including the Children’s Park and the Cathedral of St. Dominic and its adjoining plaza. 

Though rebuilt well into and past the American colonial period in 1945, the Museum and Library building was restored in keeping with the Spanish colonial influence of its original design. Features such as massive brick walls, wood paneling, and capiz shell windows typical of Spanish era structures (particularly those of the bahay-na-bato) in the Philippines remain intact. In its current capacity, the property maintains a repository of artefacts and documents depicting the social, cultural, political, religious, military, and educational life of the Novo Vizcayanos; including but not limited to anthropological dioramas, local and ethnic products and methods, and archival records. 

In more recent history, due to the ever-present challenge of disaster risk management for heritage structures, the provincial government of Nueva Vizcaya has initiated efforts for protection development programs and preventive maintenance for the People’s Museum and Library of Bayombong. This conscious effort was catalyzed by the onslaught of category-4 Typhoon Ulysses in November 2020, and spurned on by Typhoon Odette in December 2021. This development project promises the safeguarding of the Important Cultural Property through faithful restoration and modernization with respect for the structure’s-built heritage. 

Text and illustrations/photos by Ar. Armando Arciaga III, AABHD 

Birth Anniversary of Mauro ‘Malang’ Santos

The #NationalMuseumPH celebrates the 94th birth anniversary of Mauro Malang Santos, who was born #OnThisDay in 1928, by featuring his painting “Panuelo” from the Philippine Center New York (PCNY) collection. 

Signed “Malang, 22-10-73”, this oil painting is among the 115 out of the 120 works of art from the core collection of the PCNY. It is currently on exhibition at The Philippine Center New York (PCNY) Core Collection of 1974: A Homecoming Exhibition located in Galleries XXVII to XXVIII of the National Museum of Fine Arts (NMFA). 

At the core of this artwork is a lean figure of a woman with an elongated neck and tiny feet. On the figure’s right shoulder hangs a pañuelo, painted in red, pink, and earth tones. A pañuelo is a square cloth worn to cover shoulders. The artist’s renowned subjects included female vendors, barung-barong (informal urban settlements), mother and child, churches, and everyday scenes.

Born in Santa Cruz, Manila, he used Malang as his artistic signature to honor his mother, who had it as her maiden name. He took drawing lessons under Teodoro Buenaventura (1863-1950) and studied at the University of the Philippines School of Fine Arts. He won awards in the annual art competitions of the Art Association of the Philippines, Society of Philippine Illustrators and Cartoonists, and the Art Directors Guild. In 1963, he was among the Ten Outstanding Young Men awardees and the Gawad CCP Para Sa Sining awardee in 1995. In 1981, the City of Manila conferred Malang with the Patnubay ng Sining at Kalinangan Award for his significant contribution to Philippine Art. 

The artist died in 2017. He was 89 years old. 

The National Fine Arts Collection has several works of Malang namely: Mother and Child (1973, Gouache on canvas), Sampaguita Vendor (93/249) [Undated, Serigraph on paper], Yellow Plant (1983, Tempera on panel), Still Life (1985, Pastel on paper), and his gouache palette shot-glasses mounted on plywood.

You may view this painting and his other work, “Brown Head,” also from the collection of the PCNY by booking online through this website. For those who wish to #StayAtHome, you may click this link for the 360-virtual tour of the PCNY Homecoming Exhibition: https://www.nationalmuseum.gov.ph/pcny360/HTML5/pcny360.html

#MauroMalangSantos

#OnThisDay

#BeatCOVID19

#MuseumFromHome

Text and photo by NMP FAD

© National Museum of the Philippines (2022)

Gugo (Entada phaseoloides)

Did you wash your hair today? For today’s #WildlifeWednesday, we will feature a plant species commonly used for washing hair in the early times – the “Gugo”.

You might have already encountered a shampoo brand with “gugo extract”. “Gugo” or Entada phaseoloides is a native woody vine from the legumes family and is native to the Philippines. Its bark has long been used to wash the hair and be made as hair tonic. The bark is soaked in water and squished to obtain a foamy liquid (sud) which is then used as shampoo to improve hair growth. Filipinos in the earlier times who used “gugo” as their shampoo often had shiny and thick hair. 

The plant produces giant pods which grow up to a meter or more. Studies also suggest that parts of “Gugo” plant also have antidiabetic, analgesic, antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties. You may check out the actual gugo pod specimen exhibited in the Gallery VI of the National Museum of Natural History building during your next visit. 

Even if we’re not in the forest, plants are everywhere and it is always present in our daily lives. If you want to read more about “Gugo”, click this link https://bit.ly/3rpoo0F 

Text by Botany and National Herbarium DivisionPhoto courtesy of Dailun Shi (licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/)

Copper Sheathings | Marinduque Shipwreck

Copper Sheathings | Marinduque Shipwreck

  • Copper Sheathings found on Marinduque Shipwreck. © NMP-MUCHD 2022

  • An Illustration of the wreck of Marinduque ship built with copper sheathings. Illustration by Mr. Ed Bersamira, © NMP-MUCHD 2022

  • Underwater archaeologist during the survey and documentation of the Marinduque shipwreck, © NMP-MUCHD 2014

This week’s #MaritimeMonday presents the copper sheathings from the Marinduque shipwreck located in Brgy. Laylay, Boac, Marinduque. 

A team of underwater archaeologists from the #NationalMuseumPH conducted archaeological excavations of a shipwreck located in Brgy. Laylay, Boac, Marinduque from May 27, 2014 to June 6, 2014. Found approximately 100 m from the shoreline and lies 4 m below sea surface level, its wooden remains measured about 20 m long and 2 m wide. Besides the hull remains, other archaeological materials included a heavily encrusted cannon, unknown metal remains probably from an anchor, and copper and/or lead sheathing found attached to parts of the keel and planks. 

Sheathing wood can be traced back to the early 4th century Before Common Era (BCE) to protect the ship’s hull from attacks of shipworms. An ancient ship built with lead sheathing and fastened by brass and copper nails dated back to about 100 Common Era (CE) was found in the Lake Hemerose, Naples in Italy. Roman vessels found in Lake Nemi were also built with lead sheathing fastened by gilt nails. The use of lead sheathing by the Spanish during the 15th century CE was followed by a series of attempts to improve sheathing methods by the English. 

The use of copper sheathings on the other hand has been proven effective and was later adopted by the Royal Navy. By the 18th century CE, copper sheathings fastened with copper bolts have protected ships’ hulls from attack of wood-boring organisms as well as from unwanted marine growth below the waterline. As a result, the wooden sailing vessels were built with protection and were added with speed (less drag), and the warships were allowed to spend longer period at sea before being required for a routine repair and maintenance. 

Interestingly, in 1775, an American patriot, David Bushnell built his mini submarine, the American Turtle, to annihilate the British fleet. The mini sub was equipped with a bit that could drill an enemy ship’s hull, which is deployed with an improvised 150-lb gunpowder timed-bomb. The copper sheathings of the British ship Eagle, however, have rendered Bushnell’s Turtle futile despite series of attempts in 1776. 

Your #NationalMuseumPH is open to the public on a limited capacity. Visit our newly upgraded ‘300 Years of Maritime Trade in the Philippines’ exhibition on the second floor of the National of Anthropology building, or watch a virtual tour of the gallery here: https://tinyurl.com/300YearsOfMaritimeTradePH. Please monitor our website and social media pages such as Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram for further information and booking arrangements.

#CopperSheathing

#ShipHull

#MarinduqueShipwreck

#MuseumFromHome

#StaySafeStayHome

#BeatCOVID19

Poster and text by the Maritime and Underwater Cultural Heritage Division

© National Museum of the Philippines (2022)

Continue reading