EXHIBITS & COLLECTIONS CALENDAR OF EVENTS IMAX THEATER FOR EDUCATORS PUBLIC PROGRAMS
VISITOR INFO ABOUT US CONTACT US NEWSROOM VOLUNTEERISM FACILITY RENTALS MEMBERSHIP SUPPORT THE MUSEUM STATE HISTORIC SITES
BUILDING FEATURES
CHANGING GALLERIES
COLLECTION
CURATORS
E-NEWSLETTER
EXHIBIT ARCHIVE
FACES
GALLERY GUIDES
GALLERY PROGRAMS
HOOSIER HERITAGE TRAIL
INDIANA STORY GALLERIES
BIRTH OF THE EARTH
ANCIENT SEAS
AGE OF ICE
THE NATIVE AMERICANS
THE NINETEENTH STATE
THE HOOSIER WAY
CROSSROADS OF AMERICA
ENTERPRISE INDIANA
GLOBAL INDIANA
TOMORROW'S INDIANA
LEGACY THEATER
MUSEUM PASSPORT
SEARCH OUR COLLECTION
Ancient Seas

ancient_seas_abv_sm.jpgOcean in Indiana? Sharks in South Bend? Yes...in a sense. Believe it or not, ancient oceans once surged in our state.

The Earth’s crust is made up of huge, slow-moving plates that creep across the planet’s surface. Over time, lands shift and oceans rise and fall. Tropical seas repeatedly flooded Indiana throughout the Earth’s history. About 100 million years ago, the plate carrying North America—particularly, Indiana—reached its current position.

Many of the ancient lifeforms that once inhabited the area have since vanished, but Indiana’s rocks hold their story.

In this gallery, exhibits packed with the museum’s diverse fossil collections help visitors explore the ancient life that shaped the state. Visitors can also explore fossil records and see depictions of real animals throughout the gallery.

This chapter of Indiana’s Story ends with the “Missing Record,” 300 million years of rock record lost to erosion but punctuated by glimpses of life uncovered by the museum’s paleontology department.

Indiana congressman George W. Julian introduced the first resolution for a woman-suffrage amendment in 1868.
Site designed and developed by Pathway Productions