Muzeum Ziemi

POLSKA AKADEMIA NAUK MUZEUM ZIEMI W WARSZAWIE

Scientific activity

Scientific activity

Research work – of interdisciplinary character – carried out in the Museum of the Earth is strictly connected with the scientific elaboration of geological collections i.e. rocks and minerals (including meteorites), paleozoological and paleobotanical fossils, amber as well as other fossil resins and documents from the history of geological sciences.

Results of studies – apart from their scientific significance – are particularly important for the popularization programme conducted in the Museum. The scientific activity is also determined by the Museum’s service functions as well as cooperation with other scientific institutions from all over the world.

Significant number of studies carried out by employees of the Museum were presented in periodical Prace Muzeum Ziemi journal, issued since 1952. Until today, 50 volumes have been published.

Museum’s history

Museum’s history

The Museum of the Earth was founded on public initiative. In 1931, a group of outstanding geologists established the Museum of the Earth Society with the intention to open a modern geological museum (Museum of the Earth) in Warsaw, as an educational and scientific institution. The status of the Society was ratified on March 30th 1932 and this date is considered as the Museum’s official birthday.

The Museum of the Earth in Warsaw was established in 1948 and has since then been continuing the tradition initiated by the Museum of the Earth Society. The Museum has been operating within the structure of the Polish Academy of Sciences since 1959.

First geological collections were gathered in 1933. Books and other materials on the history of the geological sciences, collected by Tadeusz Wiśniowski (1865–1933), gave rise to the library and archives. The Society’s official periodical Wiadomości Muzeum Ziemi (News of the Museum of the Earth – Polish Geological Magazine) was first published in 1938.

In 1937, encouraged by the successful development of the Museum of the Earth Society, the authorities appointed the Founding Commission of the Geological Museum in Warsaw. Unfortunately, its activity was interrupted by the outbreak of war in 1939. In August 1945, the Society resumed its functioning. At first it had to preserve and arrange what was left of the collection after the war. In 1947, the Society’s Council decided to present all its property and collections to the State provided that the State Museum of the Earth is founded. On June 9th 1948, the Government announced its decision to establish the Museum of the Earth as a state institution subordinated to the Ministry of Education. The museum was intended to carry out “scientific research, propagate knowledge in geological sciences and expand the collections associated with Earth sciences from all over the world”.

The organization of the museum was lead by its initiator and first director (1948-1950) Stanisław Małkowski as well as by his deputy and successor Antonina Halicka who managed this institution for 24 years from 1950 to 1973. The collections were expanded and enriched. Moreover, intensive field studies along with educational and editorial activity were developed.

In the years 1953-1959, following the loss of the status of an independent institution, the activity of the Museum subsided. It officially became part of the National Geological Institute.

However, in 1959 following the Government resolution of January 5th, in line with earlier proposals of the 1st Congress of Polish Science (1951), the institution was incorporated into the Polish Academy of Sciences. This important decision created favourable conditions for the Museum’s reconstruction, training and expansion of its staff and particularly for the implementation of its programme.

The Museum of the Earth is located in two historical buildings on Na Skarpie Avenue (20/26 and 27) in the centre of Warsaw, perched on the high Vistula river escarpment. History of both buildings is strongly connected with the development of the palace-garden complex called “On the Hill”, designed by the royal architect Szymon Bogumił Zug. The first building was a residence of Branicki and Lubomirski family. Destroyed during the World War II was rebuilt by the State’s Office of the Capital Reconstruction (Biuro Odbudowy Stolicy) for the Museum of the Earth.

The second building initially belonged to Prince Kazimierz Poniatowski, the brother of the last Polish king. In this building, in 1887, the first private Zoological Museum was established by Kazimierz Branicki. In 1935 preserved fragments of the old building were bought by the eminent architect Bohdan Pniewski, who reconstructed and remodelled the villa. Pniewski lived and worked there until the end of his life (1965). Purchased from his heirs in 1996, the villa was assumed by the Polish Academy of Sciences (PAS) and designed to hold the main offices of the PAS Museum of the Earth.

In this building there are well preserved unusual relics of the Warsaw Uprising (1944). On the marble steps of the stairs, the blood stains of unknown, injured insurgent perpetuated.

Visit us and discover the natural treasures of our planet!

Visit us and discover the natural treasures of our planet!

The Museum of the Earth gathers, studies, preserves and exhibits collections covering all the geological sciences, with special regard to Polish minerals, meteorites and rocks, Baltic amber, fossil flora and fauna and archival documents on the history of the Earth sciences in Poland. Its staff carries out scientific studies concerning these collections and popularizes the Earth sciences.

The museum’s collection comprises over 180,000 specimens and objects. Particularly noteworthy is its extensive collection of amber and other fossil resins, ranking among the largest natural science collections of such type worldwide. The museum’s interdisciplinary research programme and documentary work (i.e. palaeobotany, palaeozoology, mineralogy – especially amber studies, preservation of geological heritage, history of the Earth sciences and museology) is closely linked to the varied profile of specimen collections and is open to specialists from both domestic and foreign centres.

The Museum of the Earth organizes permanent, temporary and travelling exhibitions, which play a significant educational and public relations role.

Whiter than White

Whiter than White

November 17 – December 29, 2017

Andrzej Kalina – Artwork

Mikołaj Kalina – Photography

 

Opening hours:

Monday to Friday: 9 a.m. – 4 p.m.

Saturday: closed

Sunday: 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. (free admission)

Regular ticket: 5 PLN

Reduced ticket: 3 PLN

 

 

 

[Best_Wordpress_Gallery id=”27″ gal_title=”Bielszy odcień bieli”]

Monumental Erratic Boulders

Monumental Erratic Boulders

Exhibition of a group of huge erratic boulders is situated in front of the Museum. The largest of them has the diameter of 9.6 m and weights more than 35 tons. The boulders were recovered from glacial deposits during construction works in different parts of Warsaw. As geological documents of particular value, they are protected by the Museum of the Earth as monuments of inanimate nature.

Physical States of Water

Physical States of Water

Photography exhibition: September 8 – November 9, 2017

Elżbieta i Marek Lejbrandtowie

 

[Best_Wordpress_Gallery id=”21″ gal_title=”Stany skupienia wody”]

Colourful World of Minerals

Colourful World of Minerals

The purpose of this exhibition is to explain the cause of forming colours that we see when looking at a particular stone, such as chemical composition, presence of inclusions or internal structure. Presented specimens have been arranged by colours and additionally divided into idiochromatic (deriving a characteristic colour from its capacity to absorb certain light rays), allochromatic (having no colour in itself but bearing coloured impurities) and pseudochromatic colours.

[Best_Wordpress_Gallery id=”22″ gal_title=”Barwny świat minerałów”]

Large Mammals of the Ice Age

Large Mammals of the Ice Age

The exhibition is dedicated to large mammals that lived in the territory of Poland in the Quaternary, during the Pleistocene, often referred to as the Ice Age. This relatively short – in geological terms – period of around 2.5 million years was characterized by several violent cycles of climate warming and cooling in a global scale that had a direct impact on the expansion of the world of plants and animals. In the Pleistocene sediments many remains of plants and animals have been preserved and among them numerous large mammal bones that allow for reconstruction of these meaningful changes to the natural environment. The exhibition presents mammalian remains discovered in different parts of Poland (also in Warsaw) from glacial and interglacial periods. Remains of cryophilic animals typical for glacial periods presented in the exhibition include: mammoth skeleton (Mammuthus primigenius), woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis) and steppe bison (Bison priscus). Thermophilic animals, typical for interglacial periods – warmer than modern times – are represented by: the remains of a straight-tusked elephant, one of the world’s largest Elephantidae species (Palaeoloxodon antiquus), the skull of forest rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus kirchbergensis) one of the four preserved in the world! as well as the skull and bones of an aurochs (Bos primigenius), which lasted until the historical times and the last one died out in 1627, about 40 kilometers west of Warsaw.

[Best_Wordpress_Gallery id=”23″ gal_title=”Wielkie ssaki epoki lodowcowej”]

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