Hunan Museum of Geology

Coordinates: 28°06′47″N 112°59′20″E / 28.11312°N 112.988841°E / 28.11312; 112.988841
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Hunan Museum of Geology
湖南省地质博物馆
Hunan Museum of Geology
Hunan Museum of Geology is located in Hunan
Hunan Museum of Geology
Location within Hunan
Established1932; 92 years ago (1932)
LocationTianxin District, Changsha, Hunan
Coordinates28°06′47″N 112°59′20″E / 28.11312°N 112.988841°E / 28.11312; 112.988841
TypeGeology museum
Websitewww.hndzbwg.com#/
Hunan Museum of Geology
Simplified Chinese湖南省地质博物馆
Traditional Chinese湖南省地質博物館

Hunan Museum of Geology (Chinese: 湖南省地质博物馆; pinyin: Húnánshěng Dìzhì Bówùguǎn) is a geology museum located in Tianxin District, Changsha, Hunan, China.[1] It is adjacent to the Hunan Youth Activity Center, Hunan Mass Art Museum, and Hunan Science and Technology Museum.

History[edit]

Hunan Museum of Geology traces its origins to the former "Specimen Display and Storage Room", founded by geologist Tian Qijuan (田奇镌) in 1932.

After the establishment of the Communist State, in 1958, the Exhibition Hall of Geology was founded by the Hunan Office of the Ministry of Geology of China. It was enlarged in 1975 and was renamed Hunan Museum of Geology. On 1 October 1980, Hunan Museum of Geology was officially opened to the public. In 1985, the then vice president Wang Zhen inspected the museum and inscribed the name.

In 2002, Hunan government approved the relocation and reconstruction of Hunan Geological Museum. At the end of 2008, the main project of the new Hunan Museum of Geology was completed. On 22 April 2012, the new Hunan Museum of Geology was officially opened to the public. On 11 December 2017, Hunan Museum of Geology began to close for renovation. On 19 April 2019, the Hunan Museum of Geology reopened and was officially reopened the next day.

On 21 December 2020, it has been categorized as a 2nd Grade National Museum by the China Museum Association.[2]

Architecture[edit]

Hunan Museum of Geology occupies a building area of 32,000-square-metre (340,000 sq ft) and the total area is over 48,000-square-metre (520,000 sq ft). It is mainly divided into six exhibition halls:

  • Earth Mystery Hall
  • Geology and Mineral Resources Hall
  • Geological Environment Hall
  • Life Evolution Hall
  • Mineral and Gem Hall
  • surveying, Mapping and Geographic Information Hall

Transportation[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Fu Lin (付琳) (13 February 2021). 大年初二 云游地博:湖南省地质博物馆 金刚石中的诗与远方. Xinhua News Agency (in Chinese). Retrieved 3 May 2021.
  2. ^ Li Shujing (李淑静); Tang Lihan (唐李晗) (23 December 2020). 湖南新增2家国家一级博物馆. people.com.cn (in Chinese). Retrieved 3 May 2021.

External links[edit]