
Open to all park visitors during open hours.
Fossil Museum
Tracing Life Across Geological Time.
Millions of years. Preserved in stone.
This is the story of how islands are born, how creatures adapt, and how entire ecosystems rise and fall long before humans arrived.

A window into deep time
The Fossil Museum holds a carefully gathered collection of marine and land fossils. Each one tells a real story: extinction, survival, and transformation across geological eras.
These aren't just old rocks or decorative artifacts. They are scientific archives, memory cards from ancient Earth.


Spiral Wonders - Marine Fossils & Ammonites
Look closely at the ammonites. Those perfect spirals once swam through prehistoric oceans. They show us how ancient sea life lived, died, and turned into stone over millions of years.
You don't need to be a scientist to feel the wonder.

Layers of Change - Geological Stratification
Ever noticed how rock forms in layers? Those stripes tell stories too. Climate shifts. Volcanic tremors. Slow pushes from deep inside the Earth.
Each layer is a chapter. The Fossil Museum helps you read them.


Extinction, Survival, and what comes next
Some species made it. Most didn't
Our fossil displays connect the dots between ancient extinction events and today's conservation work. Because resilience isn't new. Neither is vulnerability.
What changes is whether we pay attention.
From Ancient Fossils to Modern Conservation
Why look backward to move forward?
Because fossil records teach us:
- How climate has changed naturally over time
- Why species disappear and what slows that process
- How entire habitats transform or collapse
- What adaptation actually looks like across thousand of years

The deeper you look into the past, the sharper your view of today's biodiversity challenges.
Understanding deep time sharpens awareness of contemporary biodiversity challenges.
Why It Matters Today
Conservation is about the future. But the future is built on the past.
The Fossil Museum doesn't just show you old things.
It reminds you that ecosystems change and that what survives depends on what we choose to protect today.
Come see for yourself.

