City
Epaper

Built from 20 million-year-old rocks, fossil museum in Kasauli pre-launched

By IANS | Updated: April 13, 2023 17:25 IST

Kasauli, April 13 Being built from 20 million-year-old rocks of Kasauli sandstone, Tethy's Fossil Museum and Research Centre ...

Open in App

Kasauli, April 13 Being built from 20 million-year-old rocks of Kasauli sandstone, Tethy's Fossil Museum and Research Centre was pre-launched in the presence of noted geologists Ashok Sahni and O.N. Bhargava.

The centre is coming up at Dhangiari, a small village in Kasauli tehsil.

The geological museum is located on the debris concealing the Dagshai-Subathu boundary which signifies the closure of Tethys sea and evolution of terrestrial ecosystem, Ritesh Arya, founder of the Tethys Fossil Museum, told on Thursday.

He said that the museum is being built from 20 million-year-old rocks of Kasauli sandstone, beautifully chiseled to give the museum an aesthetic look.

"The water which we drink in the museum is from a borewell drilled into 40 million-year-old white quartzite sandstone which is marker bed extending from Pakistan to Burma in the least," he said.

Sahni said that the work is excellent and it will go a long way in guiding students about the advent, present and future of the world.

Researchers will certainly find this place as a repository for future critical analysis and they must visit this place, he said.

The Tethys Museum will display diverse well preserved fossils of Stromatolites Edia Cara, Trilobites, Molluscs, Ammonites, etc., from the Spiti Valley, fishes, whales, sharks and oysters from Subathu and Leh, plant remains consisting of logs of trees, leaves, flowers and roots from Kasauli and Dharamsala, and mammals from Shiwaliks.

Signifying gradual evolution of life on this planet and all are part of the museum repository, Arya said.

"So anyone visiting the museum will have a glimpse of how different fossils collected from different geological formations across the Himalayas can help rebuilt the entire paleohistory of the various events which led to the evolution and birth of the Himalayas," he added.

Tethys was a sea once upon a time separating India from Tibet and Eurasia.

As the Indian plate moved northward, the Tethys sea squeezed and when the two plates collided the Tethyan sediments were uplifted forming the mighty Himalaya.

A lot of research has been done in timing the collision of the two plates leading to evolution and birth of the Tethyan Himalayas.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Fossil museum and research centreTethys fossil museumpakistanValleyDhs punjabValle
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalChandigarh BJP Office Blast: Two Suspects Arrested for Grenade Blast; Drone Used to Smuggle Chinese Hand Grenade From Pakistan

InternationalUS State Department Announces Permanent Closure of Peshawar Consulate in Pakistan

InternationalSaudi Arabia Destroys 21 Drones, 3 Ballistic Missiles in First Week of Middle East War

InternationalMiddle East Crisis: Saudi Arabia-Pakistan to Take Joint Military Action Against Iran Attacks in KSA?

CricketPakistan Player Misbehaved With Hotel Staff During T20 World Cup 2026

National Realted Stories

NationalPM Modi calls on Assam, Kerala voters to exercise franchise in large numbers, strengthen democracy

NationalVoting underway in Tripura’s Dharmanagar bypoll under tight security

NationalPuducherry Assembly Election 2026: Robot ‘Nila’ Welcomes Voters With Flowers at Polling Station (Watch Video)

NationalNagaland bypoll: Voting underway in Koridang amid heavy security

NationalVoting for bypolls in Karnataka, Nagaland, Tripura begins