Conferences
8th International Workshop on the Neogene of Central and South-Eastern Europe (NCSEE 2019)
Faculty of Geology, University of Warsaw (principal organizer) and the Polish Academy of Sciences, Museum of the Earth in Warsaw have the pleasure to invite you to participate at the 8th NSCEE Workshop which will be held in European Centre for Geological Education (ECEG) in Chęciny near Kielce in dates 27th–31st May 2019.
For complete information see:
http://www.conference-eceg.pl/home
NSCEE 2019 Workshop in Poland
Opening hours
Monday to Friday: 9 a.m. – 4 p.m.
Saturday: closed
Sunday: 10 a.m. – 4 p.m.
The last entrance to the Museum is at 3.30 p.m.
Permanent exhibitions: Al. Na Skarpie 20/26 building
Temporary exhibitions: Al. Na Skarpie 27 building
In period from April 1st to October 31st, open- air exhibitions, located in the garden around the building with permanent exhibitions are open every Sunday.
Admission fees
Regular ticket: 16 PLN
Reduced ticket: 12 PLN (schoolchildren, students, pensioners, employees of PAS)
Family ticket: 40 PLN (including 3+ Large Family Card; 2 adults and children under 18)
Ticket for a disabled person’s caregiver: 1 PLN
Guided tours for individual visitors: 50 PLN including entrance ticket (available for individual visitors up to 4 persons)
Tuesday – free entrance
Payment in cash only
How to find us
Polish Academy of Sciences Museum of the Earth in Warsaw
Al. Na Skarpie 20/26, 27
Public transport: click on the sign of bus or tram stop on the map – numbers of bus or tram lines will be shown.
Earth in the Solar System
The exhibition shows the position and peculiarity of our planet comparing to other objects in the Solar System. The space-oriented aspect of the exhibition is complemented by a section dedicated to impact craters being unique geological structures formed during collision with meteorites, comets or asteroids with the Earth’s surface The issues concerning atmosphere, biosphere, hydrosphere and lithosphere of the Earth are illustrated by satellite images and this also emphasises the outer-space extent of phenomena taking place on our planet.
Processes Shaping the Earth
The exhibition on dynamic geology presents the most important phenomena and processes shaping the Earth. The purpose of the exposition is to explain processes occurring under the impact of external geological factors such as weathering, erosion, mass movement, sedimentation and processes caused by internal geological circumstance taking place in the Earth’s crust or in its interior. Our exhibition provides a synthesis outlining the effects of such processes as: diastrophism, volcanism, plutonism or metamorphism. The exhibition is illustrated with a deliberately selected collection of rock and mineral specimens.
From the Earth’s Geological Past
The exhibition pertains to issues that are of interest to historical geology. It intends to explain how information concerning the Earth’s past is collected. With the use of selected examples illustrated by exhibits from often unique sites, our exhibition allows to understand the path of individual fossils and rocks to interpret the evolution of entire plant and animal groups. Moreover, it is also possible to reproduce changes of the past taking place in natural environments in the scale of regions, continents and the globe.
Management
Polish Academy of Sciences Museum of the Earth in Warsaw
Al. Na Skarpie 20/26, 27
00-488 Warsaw
Poland
phone/fax: 48 (22) 629 74 97
email: sekretariat@mz.pan.pl
acting Director of Museum of the Earth
dr hab. Błażej Błażejowski, prof. PAN
bblazejowski@mz.pan.pl
tel.: (22) 629 74 79 wew. 202
acting Deputy Director for Finance
mgr Elżbieta Adamska
eadamska@mz.pan.pl
tel.: (22) 629 74 79 wew. 208
tel.: 530 211 572