Campus Landmarks
Ashley Schiff Memorial Park Preserve
Dr. Ashley Schiff was a dedicated and popular professor of Political Science and avowed
naturalist in the early days of Stony Brook University. In 1970, a 26-acre woodland,
lined with oak and maple trees, often walked by Professor Schiff and his students,
was set aside to honor him. Fauna spotted in the area include garter snakes, Virginia
opossums,rabbits, chipmunks, and box turtles. The preserve is located between Roth
Quad and the Marine Science Research Center.
Boulders
Scattered about the Stony Brook campus are several hundred granite boulders, 20,000
year-old leftovers from the Ice Age glaciers that once blanketed Long Island. During
the extensive excavations that accompanied the initial construction of buildings and
roadways on campus, these boulders were unearthed and incorporated into the landscape.
Today, many of these ancient rocks serve as brightly painted totems for fraternities,
sororities, and other campus organizations. (Word to the wise: Don't go tagging rocks
just because you're feeling inspired; permission from the Office of Student Activities
is strictly required!)
Paul Simons Memorial Bike Path
Stony Brook’s campus is set among 1,100 wooded acres, complete with a nature preserve.
The Paul Simons Memorial Bike Path, six miles of pristine pavement for biking, running,
and rollerblading, encircles the campus. The path is dedicated to the memory of Paul
Simons, a former Stony Brook student and avid cyclist. The path will ultimately connect
to the proposed Town of Brookhaven trail.
Stony Bones
It's a long way from Cretaceous-era Madagascar to present-day Long Island—8,600 miles
and 70 million years, to be precise—but Manjungasaurus crenatissimus looks right at home in the lobby of our Administration Building. The exact replica
of the Cretaceous meat-eater is patched together from specimens unearthed on Madagascar
by a team of Stony Brook University paleontologists, led by Dr. David Krause of the
Department of Anatomical Sciences. The fearsome skeleton has even acquired a nickname:
"Stony Bones."
Zebra Path
The Zebra Path is a striped geometric walkway connecting the Academic Mall with northern
sections of campus beyond John S. Toll Drive. The eye-catching path lies in front
of the Career Center and behind the Melville Library. In March 1981, as part of an
advanced seminar in public art, Stony Brook student Kim Hardiman won a grant to beautify
the campus. Her 232' x 12' handpainted walkway, regularly refurbished with new coats
of paint, constitutes one student's lasting tribute to the Stony Brook campus.
9/11 Memorial
The Memorial Arch, located in front of the Humanities Building, was donated by the
Stony Brook Alumni Association in memory of the 21 Stony Brook alumni who were lost
on September 11, 2001. Their deaths strengthen our resolve as a University community
to foster the most basic ideals of freedom and equality. Each fall, we honor their
memory in the Commemoration of September 11 ceremony.