New Fossil Park and Museum at Rowan University Transports Visitors 66 Million Years Back in Time
Go back 66 million years without ever leaving South Jersey. A new fossil park and museum invites visitors to explore the world of dinosaurs as they discover life-sized dinosaur displays that inspire imaginations and bring the prehistoric creatures to life. The Edelman Fossil Park & Museum of Rowan University opened on Saturday, March 29.
“When you come to this museum, you are going to see immersive exhibits, the likes of which the world has never seen,” said Dr. Ken Lacovara, founding executive director of the Edelman Fossil Park & Museum of Rowan University, in a statement shared with CBS News Philadelphia.
The $75 million fossil park and museum in Mantua Township is an experience unto itself. Forty feet below the museum, a quarry containing more than 100,000 fossils, from marine crocodiles to sea turtles, has been unearthed. According to the park and museum, visitors can experiment with their own digs there and keep any artifacts they uncover.
New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy helped cut the ribbon outside the facility on Thursday, March 27, and said children would soon learn that the museum was built on land where dinosaurs once roamed.
“Our state’s young learners will have a chance to see with their own eyes how the natural world that surrounds us is a direct link to our planet’s earliest history,” Murphy said.
Jean and Ric Edelman, both Rowan alums, donated $25 million to fund the Edelman Fossil Park & Museum. The Edelmans said nothing like this experience exists elsewhere, and the hands-on learning that it provides would help call attention to Gloucester County.
“It’s also going to represent a huge economic engine for the region, bringing jobs and money into this environment that is going to be supportive for all the families that live here,” Ric Edelman said in an interview with CBS News Philadelphia.
Learn more about this new attraction on the Edelman Fossil Park & Museum’s website.