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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Fifth-grader spots goof at Smithsonian

Associated Press The Spokesman-Review

ALLEGAN, Mich. – Is fifth-grader Kenton Stufflebeam smarter than the Smithsonian?

On a winter break trip with his family to the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History, the 11-year-old southwestern Michigan boy noticed that a notation, in bold lettering, mistakenly identified the Precambrian as an era.

Since it opened in 1981, millions of people have paraded past the museum’s Tower of Time, a display involving prehistoric time. Kenton was the first to point out the error.

Kenton, who attends Alamo Elementary School near Kalamazoo, said his fifth-grade teacher, John Chapman, had nearly made the same mistake about the Precambrian in a classroom earth-science lesson before catching himself.

“I knew Mr. Chapman wouldn’t tell all these students” bad information, the boy told the Kalamazoo Gazette.

Kevin Stufflebeam took his son to the museum’s information desk to report Kenton’s concern on a comment form.

Last week, the boy received a letter from the museum acknowledging that his observation was “spot on.”

“The Precambrian is a dimensionless unit of time, which embraces all the time between the origin of Earth and the beginning of the Cambrian Period of geologic time,” the letter says.

The solution would not involve advanced science but rather simply painting over the word “era,” the note says.