Hall of Planet Earth

American Museum of Natural History
Central Park West at 79th Street
The Gottesman Hall of Planet Earth displays one of the most outstanding collections of geological specimens ever displayed in an exhibition hall. Between 1996 and 1998, Museum teams embarked on dozens of reconnaissance trips and 28 acquisition expedi... more
The Gottesman Hall of Planet Earth displays one of the most outstanding collections of geological specimens ever displayed in an exhibition hall. Between 1996 and 1998, Museum teams embarked on dozens of reconnaissance trips and 28 acquisition expeditions to distant locations, from Indonesian volcanoes to the Sahara Desert in West Africa. Each trip included working with local experts to uncover the most geologically significant rocks. Every specimen and model was chosen to illustrate an important aspect of Earth's dynamic story. To tell the most significant stories of Earth, from its early evolution to the earthquakes and storms we encounter today, the 8,830-square-foot Hall is organized into exhibition zones based on five major questions. How Has The Earth Evolved? Why Are There Ocean Basins, Continents, And Mountains? How Do We Read The Rocks? What Causes Climate And Climate Change? Why Is Earth Habitable? Four years in the making, HoPE features 168 rock specimens and 11 full-scale models of classic outcroppings from 25 countries — including Australia, Indonesia, Italy, Kazakhstan, Mauritania, Scotland, Switzerland, and Venezuela — and five ocean floor regions, as well as an ar... more

The Gottesman Hall of Planet Earth displays one of the most outstanding collections of geological specimens ever displayed in an exhibition hall. Between 1996 and 1998, Museum teams embarked on dozens of reconnaissance trips and 28 acquisition expeditions to distant locations, from Indonesian volcanoes to the Sahara Desert in West Africa. Each trip included working with local experts to uncover the most geologically significant rocks. Every specimen and model was chosen to illustrate an important aspect of Earth's dynamic story.

To tell the most significant stories of Earth, from its early evolution to the earthquakes and storms we encounter today, the 8,830-square-foot Hall is organized into exhibition zones based on five major questions.

  1. How Has The Earth Evolved?
  2. Why Are There Ocean Basins, Continents, And Mountains?
  3. How Do We Read The Rocks?
  4. What Causes Climate And Climate Change?
  5. Why Is Earth Habitable?

Four years in the making, HoPE features 168 rock specimens and 11 full-scale models of classic outcroppings from 25 countries — including Australia, Indonesia, Italy, Kazakhstan, Mauritania, Scotland, Switzerland, and Venezuela — and five ocean floor regions, as well as an array of specially created videos and computer interactives that allow visitors to both explore geologic time and gain an understanding of the methods scientists use to study vast Earth systems.


Drag the street view to look around 360°.
Use the arrow buttons to navigate down the street and around the neighborhood!

American Museum of Natural History

Central Park West at 79th Street
New York, NY 10024
(212) 769-5100

Admission From

Free

Category

Arts

Other Arts Events

In the Now: Gender and Nation in Europe, Selections from the Sir Mark Fehrs

In the Now unites nearly fifty women artists who are resisting traditional ideas... view

We Are Here: Scenes from the Streets

We Are Here: Scenes from the Streets, on view at ICP this fall, will spotlight s... view

Trust Me - Photographic Works from the Whitney Collection

Drawn from the Whitney’s collection, Trust Me brings together photographic works... view

Pleiades Gallery Celebrates 50 Years!

Pleiades Gallery to Celebrate 50th Anniversary Pleiades Gallery, one of the... view

 

The Billie Presents Lynn Nottage's Fabulation,or the Re-Education of Undine

 The Billie Holiday Theatre, one of the nation’s preeminent arts and cultur... view

Artist Raul Guerrero in conversation with the ICA Miami's Gean Moreno

Artist Raul Guerrero will be in conversation with the Institute of Contemporary ... view

Amalia Mesa-Bains: Archaeology of Memory

The first retrospective exhibition by the pioneering artist, curator, and theori... view

Käthe Kollwitz

In the early decades of the 20th century, when many artists were experimenting w... view