Exhibits
- Window on Washington Waters is a 120,000-US-gallon (450,000 l) tank created as part of the 2007 expansion. It replicates the coastal waters of Washington state from about 5 to 60 feet (1.5 to 18 m), and is home to native marine life including salmon, rockfish, and sea anemones. During the dive shows which take place several times each day, divers wearing special masks are able to converse with the visitors.
- The Crashing Waves Exhibit located next to the Window on Washington Waters tank is a 40-foot (12 m) wave tank that replicates Washington shores from the intertidal zone to a depth of about 5 feet (1.5 m).
- Life on the Edge was opened in 2002. Two large exhibit pools that include touch zones let visitors see the tidepool life of Washington's outer coast and of Seattle's inland sea.
- Life of a Drifter includes a 12-foot (3.7 m) high glass "donut" where visitors can be surrounded by moon jellies, a multi-species display featuring the giant Pacific octopus, and a 13-foot (4.0 m) touch table where visitors can get a closer look at some of the area's drifters including juvenile rockfish, sea stars, and plankton.
- Pacific Coral Reef is a man made coral reef in a 25,000-US-gallon (95,000 l) tank that showcases fish that live in and around the reefs.
- Ocean Oddities is home to pinecone fish, cowfish, flying gurnards, potbellied seahorses, and short dragonfish.
- Birds and Shores consists of Northwest Shores, which shows birds in a variety of habitats of the coastal Northwest, Alcids, which showcases diving birds such as tufted puffins and common murres, and the Shorebird exhibit.
- The Marine Mammals area includes exhibits for harbor seals, Northern fur seals, sea otters, and river otters, as well as the Orca Family Activity Center which educates visitors about orcas, particularly those belonging to the Southern Resident Community residing in Puget Sound.
- Puget Sound Fish is a three part exhibit showing fish from the Puget Sound, including grunt sculpins, Pacific spiny lumpsuckers, midshipman fish, canary rockfish, wolf eels, and decorated warbonnets.
- The Underwater Dome is a mostly transparent spherical undersea room in a 400,000-US-gallon (1,500,000 l) tank, accessed by two short tunnels. It was built as part of the original construction and opened in 1977. The tank is home to species that would be found in Puget Sound including salmon, Lingcod, sharks, sturgeon, skates, and rockfish.
Read more about this topic: Seattle Aquarium
Famous quotes containing the word exhibits:
“After all the field of battle possesses many advantages over the drawing-room. There at least is no room for pretension or excessive ceremony, no shaking of hands or rubbing of noses, which make one doubt your sincerity, but hearty as well as hard hand-play. It at least exhibits one of the faces of humanity, the former only a mask.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“Uncritical semantics is the myth of a museum in which the exhibits are meanings and the words are labels. To switch languages is to change the labels.”
—Willard Van Orman Quine (b. 1908)
“It exhibits the effort of an essentially prosaic mind to lift itself, by a prolonged muscular strain, into poetry.”
—Henry James (18431916)