Everything about The Museum Of The Earth totally explained
The
Museum of the Earth is a public natural history museum. It is located in
Ithaca, New York, on the campus of the
PRI, its parent organization. The Museum is a major tourist attraction and source of economic development in Tompkins County and New York's southern tier, an educational facility that stresses the interdependence of the Earth and its life, fostering greater public understanding of the environment, its history, and its future, and an important resource for teachers and students across central New York State for improving science teaching and learning.
Paleontological Research Institution
PRI was founded in
1932 by
Gilbert Harris, a professor of geology at
Cornell University from
1894 to
1934. He founded
PRI to house his collection of fossils and to publish research in
paleontology - the study of the history of
life on Earth.
PRI began as a small building behind Dr. Harris' home in
Ithaca, New York. Through various additions over the next two decades, the original building grew into a 20-room complex that housed the Institution's collections, library, laboratories, and offices.
PRI has continued to grow through the years, requiring a move to larger quarters in
1968. The present facility on
West Hill, along
Trumansburg Road (N.Y. Rte. 96), holds over 2 million fossils and shells, and a 50,000 volume research library. In 2003, PRI opened the 18,000 square foot
Museum of the Earth, a natural history museum that showcases
PRI's specimens.
Exhibits
The
Museum of the Earth showcases a wide selection of fossils from the collection of the
Paleontological Research Institution, which contains over 2 million specimens, from microfossils to large
Ice Age animals.
Permanent
North Atlantic Right Whale #2030
In the spring of
2004 a permanent exhibit on
North Atlantic Right Whale #2030 opened in the Museum lobby, funded by a grant from the
Nelson B. Delavan Foundation. The exhibit includes a short film by David Brown featuring footage of the unsuccessful attempts to rescue #2030 from the fishing gear that ultimately ended her life. Visitors are told how
PRI and the
Museum of the Earth aimed to create a memorial to the whale's life.
PRI’s
North Atlantic Right Whale was mounted on a steel armature in a greenhouse on-site. The Museum building was left open on the northeast end so that the whale could be brought through for installation. In November
2002 a crane gently carried the pieces into the building and lifted them to the ceiling, where they were attached to a beam built into the roof specifically for the purpose of holding 8 tons of whale bones.
Rock of Ages Sands of Time
A 544-panel mural, each panel of which represents 1 million years, created by Ithaca artist
Barbara Page. It seeks to give a new perspective on the emergence of life on earth. The panels represent an unbroken sequence of twelve geological periods that span an eon. Visitors can help support
PRI and the
Museum of the Earth by
Adopting a Tile
.
A Journey Through Time
This exhibit leads visitors through the eons from the
Big Bang to the present day, aiming to challenge their perceptions about the present, future, and human effects and dependence on
Earth.
Fossil Preparation Lab - visitors can interact with Museum staff as they prepare specimens for exhibition and research.
Beneath an Ancient Sea - an exihibit about the warm, shallow seas which covered central New York 380 million years ago. It includes a model of the 30 foot carnivorous Dunkleosteus from the Devonian period. Visitors can explore the process of plate tectonics that built the Appalachian Mountains and the rapid biological evolution that was taking place at this time.
Carboniferous, Permian, and Triassic Periods
Where Dinosaurs Walked - visitors can learn how ideas and depictions of dinosaurs changed with scientific discoveries, and how an animal adapts to its environment with games relating to and examples of natural selection.
Jurassic, Cretaceous, and Tertiary Periods - visitors learn about the dominance and demise of dinosaurs through specimens, film, and images. The exhibit also teaches about the origin of birds and flowers and the mass extinction that killed the dinosaurs.
A World Carved by Ice - visitors can explore how changes in climate affect life, and how glaciers formed the landscape of the Finger Lakes.
Biodiversity and Extinction - this exhibits aims to make visitors reflect on how humans fit into the complex network of life on Earth and how the history of the Earth is an integral part of human life. Visitors are also shown the effects of both human and natural factors on extinct and endangered animals.
The Gorge Garden - a garden that recreates the northeastern United States during the Ice Age, with tundra vegetation, polished gravel, and large boulders (glacial erratics). This exhibit was funded by a grant from the Ithaca Garden Club.
Hyde Park Mastodon
This exhibit tells the story of this accidental find and how it was brought into the Museum. In late 2002/early 2003 the skeleton of the Hyde Park Mastodon was cast by Jim Sherpa, working in the lab of mastodon paleontologist Dan Fisher at the University of Michigan. The bones were shipped in February 2003 to Prehistoric Animal Structures (PAST) of Calgary, Canada, where they built a non-invasive armature to mount the skeleton without damaging the bones. The armature and mastodon were then shipped to the Museum in summer 2003 for mounting.
Temporary
March 8, 2008 - June 15, 2008
Fishing for Fossils: Exploring the Green River Formation
Join the Museum of the Earth as we journey back in time, 50-Million years ago, to visit the balmy Eocene lake shores of Wyoming, Colorado, and Utah. This area of the United States was once a sup-tropical area, much like Florida is today.
Now, the area's climate is vastly different; however, the world-renowned Green River Formation holds a snapshot of this Eocene landscape. Buried in ancient lake sediments are fossilized fish, insects, plants, reptiles, birds, and mammals. Fossils from the Green River Formation are exceptional for their abundance and detail of preservation.
Come Fishing for Fossils and reconnect with eh fish of today by looking at the fish of yesterday.
Programs
School and Community Group Field Trips
Public and private schools, clubs, and other organizations are encouraged to contact the Museum of the Earth’s education office. We will work with you to schedule and plan your ideal field trip or workshop, answer any questions, and give you the Museum’s current fee list and field trip policies. To find out more about the Museum’s educational programs and workshops or to schedule a field trip contact Education Programs Manager
.
Public Programs
Natural History at Noon
On two Saturdays of every month, the Museum invites noted speakers to give short talks about their areas of expertise. The topics are varied and include lectures ranging from the history of the universe to fossils found in the rocks of New York State, to the relationships between art and natural history. Talks are held in the Ray Van Houtte Museum classroom. These informative lectures are open to everyone and are free with admission to the Museum!
Guided Museum Tours: A Journey Through Time
How has life changed over time? A museum tour will lead you on a voyage through time, highlighting key concepts in the Museum and some of the most spectacular specimens on exhibit. Tours begin in the Museum lobby Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 11:30 am and Saturdays at 11am.
Summer Fossil Collecting Field Trips & James Potorti Interpretive Gorge Walks
During the warm-weather months, we offer a number of field trips to fossil-rich localities around central New York. These field trips are a great way to see the world through the eyes of a geologist, and offer a chance to take home fossil specimens that may be around 380 million years old!
The James Potorti Interpretive Walk series, offered four Fridays in the Summer, explores the spectacular geology of the local New York State Park gorges.
Architecture
Based on the internationally known natural history collections of PRI, the Museum of the Earth tells the story of the 4.6 billion year history of the Earth, focusing particularly on the Northeastern United States.
The Museum occupies an 18,000 square foot addition to the present PRI complex on Ithaca's West Hill. The new building was designed by the New York architectural firm of Weiss/Manfredi, recently best known for designing the award-winning Women's War Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery. The design for the Museum has attracted much critical notice.
Further Information
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