STATEHOUSE NEWS
            
         
    
    
        
        
            Ohio Statehouse Hosts Earth Science Week Fossil Tour
            
            October 3, 2013
         
         
     
    
     The Ohio Statehouse will celebrate Earth Science Week by offering a FREE fossil tour of Capitol Square. The special tour will take place on Friday, October 11 from noon until 1 p.m. The tour will depart from the Map Room, located on the ground floor of the Ohio Statehouse. Participants will explore the building stones that make up the Ohio Statehouse and Senate Office Building. 
   
 The tour will be conducted by Dale M. Gnidovic, curator of the OSU Orton Geological Museum, and Mike Angle, assistant division chief at ODNR Division of Geological Survey. The tour will focus on the "Building Stones of Capitol Square." For more information, visit www.earthsciweek.org. To reserve a free spot, call 614/728-2697 or lstedke@csrab.state.oh.us. 
   
 The Ohio Statehouse is constructed of Columbus Limestone. Columbus Limestone is of the Middle Devonian age and was named for the city where it has long been quarried. A large vein of Columbus Limestone formed in a north-south line, from the Glacial Grooves of Kelleys Island in Lake Erie, south to Columbus, Ohio. Four hundred million years ago the limestone was the sandy bottom of a tropical ocean that covered the state. Fossils of marine animals are abundant in Columbus Limestone and can be seen throughout the Capitol Square complex. 
   
 To view this press release and others, visit www.ohiostatehouse.org. 
   
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 CALENDAR LISTING: 
 Earth Science Week Fossil Tour 
 October 11, 2013, Noon 
 Ohio Statehouse, Broad &; High Streets downtown Columbus 
 Map Room, Ground Floor of Statehouse 
 www.ohiostatehouse.org 
 614/752-9777 
 To reserve a free spot, call 614/728-2130 or lstedke@csrab.state.oh.us.