ALBANY, NY.- The New York State Museum announced the opening of a new long-term exhibition about the Ice Ages in New York State. The exhibition examines the landscape and animals of the Ice Ages in New York and features fossils of Ice Age mammals including mammoths, caribou, moose, and whales.
Over the last two million years, New York has experienced several Ice Ages interspersed with warm periods. Gigantic glaciers covered the state, and then retreated. Each wiped the landscape nearly clean, creating lakes, widening valleys, and rounding mountaintops. Many large Ice Age mammalsincluding mastodons, woolly mammoths, giant ground sloths, and musk oxenare now extinct or gone from New York.
The State Museum is a valuable cultural and educational resource for the public, said Board of Regents Chancellor Betty A. Rosa. I encourage teachers to bring students to the Ice Ages exhibition to learn about the history of New York before people were here and glaciers covered the landscape.
Were proud to open the Ice Ages exhibition at the State Museum, said State Education Commissioner MaryEllen Elia. From exploring how glaciers work to learning how mastodons once inhabited New York, this exhibition is an excellent educational opportunity for both children and adults.
New York looked very different 13,000 years ago as the last Ice Age was ending, said New York State Museum Director Mark Schaming. We hope visitors leave the exhibition with a greater understanding of the arctic animals that once inhabited the state and how the Ice Ages left a lasting impact on New Yorks landscape.