00:06Oh
00:41My name is Luis Antonio Becerra, and I learned what were the fossils, because I knew the fossils
00:49since I was a kid, I played with them, but I didn't know what they were.
00:53The first time we came was when a geologist named Marie Joelle Giroux came to do a work with children
01:06called Mugay, which was a museum geological art.
01:10She took us to the field and told us what were and what organisms existed here.
01:19And then I continued to accompany different groups of researchers, groups of universities,
01:30and all of them, and groups of national researchers and also foreigners.
01:37And from there, that was when I proposed that there was a museum where they were hiding
01:47the fossils that were buried there and had some collections of fossils.
01:55I started to work because avid lot of the fossils, and I went to build ideas
02:00around my body, and I thought, I wanted to pursue a beautiful species,
02:01and to find them more and more sophisticated, and more sophisticated than I was born.
02:05And I began to work with the whole town of Mugay.
02:11How did you get involved in your fossil fuels?
02:12You know what I did?
02:22because after me there were six brothers that I had to maintain and
02:31because of that I ended up staying here as an artisan,
02:35we ended up buying a carpenter's workshop and I dedicated to that,
02:43to the carpenter's workshop, and it was the case that
02:50in 1996 came an artisan, Rodrigo Arenas Betancourt,
02:55and he taught me to make a tridimensional, first of human figure,
02:59and then to make a tridimensional figure,
03:04you can do whatever it is,
03:08the human figure is one of the most difficult to make as a sculpture.
03:14Don Luis es una de mis personas favoritas en el mundo entero,
03:18entonces sí, como un amigo y ya a nivel como de ciencia,
03:24creo que es una persona muy curiosa, alguien que se interesa mucho por conocer de lo que sea,
03:29todo el tiempo está dispuesto a aprender, todo el tiempo está dispuesto a escuchar,
03:34a acompañar, y aunque uno no lo crea a uno cuando va a campo con él,
03:40no es que él aprenda de uno, uno aprende de él.
03:42Entrego que era más.
04:10Entrego que era props para la
04:22Welcome to the Life Museum of Floresta Boyacá.
04:27Classified and inventariados that are registered in the Colombian Service Service,
04:33there are more than 300, but we need to mark and inventariados
04:39and others that we have there, so I think it reaches about 1,000 fossils.
04:46This work has been very difficult,
04:51even when there has not been support from the local government.
05:01It has been very difficult.
05:09What is the name of Floresta Boyacá?
05:14Floresta Boyacá es un lugar particular
05:16porque tiene unas rocas que cuentan con un registro fósil muy antiguo,
05:21del Devónico Medio, hace aproximadamente 380 millones de años,
05:26y nos cuentan esa historia y cómo era el ambiente de Colombia en ese momento,
05:32qué animales tenía, bajo qué circunstancias vivían,
05:35la variedad de fósiles que tenían, y Floresta particularmente,
05:39de todos los puntos que tienen rocas del Devónico,
05:42cuenta con una abundancia de invertebrados marinos,
05:46como corales, crinoideos, trilobites, brachiópodos, gasterópodos,
05:53que la hacen muy excepcional.
06:04Florestanos
06:05Entendí que los juguetes que yo tuve fueron los juguetes más valiosos del mundo,
06:09entonces eso me motivó a valorar precisamente ese patrimonio que tenemos los florestanos.
06:18Música
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06:26Música
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