Museum of Northern Arizona
The Museum of Northern Arizona (MNA) is a private, non-profit, member-based institution located in Flagstaff, Arizona at the base of the beautiful San Francisco Peaks. The Museum was founded in 1928 by Harold S. Colton and Mary-Russell Ferrell Colton and was originally established to protect and preserve the natural and cultural heritage of northern Arizona through research, collections, conservation and education. MNA's mission to inspire a sense of love and responsibility for the beauty and diversity of the Colorado Plateau through collecting, studying, interpreting, and preserving the region’s natural and cultural heritage.
The Museum has evolved into a regional center of learning with collections, exhibits, educational programs, publications, and research projects that serve thousands of people each year. As the only accredited museum within 150 miles of Flagstaff, the Museum of Northern Arizona plays a vital role as interpreter of the Colorado Plateau.
MNA Storytime: Goat in the Rug read by Vivian Descheney SD 480p
Rug weaving (4 min)
Tufa Casting - 3 min
Artist Debra Edgerton Unveils the Meaning Behind the "Life Extended: Biology as Metaphor" Exhibit
Thank You 2024!
Making the Map with George Billingsley
African Americans and the Arizona Lumber Industry
Moving from Appropriation to Appreciation
Selling the Southwest Curators talk
More than a Meal
ECC equinox
Passionate Vision, The Art of Joella Jean Mahoney with Alan Petersen
Gene Foster and the Glen Canyon Project
Family Friday: Wreaths
Family Friday Fall trees
Family Friday: Lava Tube
Family Friday: How a museum works
Family Friday Humor
About Slow Art Day
Náátsʼíilid/Rainbow Light
Grand Canyon Talk: Butterflies & Skippers
Family Friday: Fires and Forests
Family Friday: Color Journey
Route 66 before the myth: Archaeological Perspectives of the Mother Road
Grand Canyon: Century Plants
Family Friday: Meteor Crater