Celebrate Moundville Archaeological Park’s Ancient Art and Technology Weekend by hearing Chickasaw Storyteller, Amy Bluemel, recount The Story of Flint!
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Celebrate Moundville Archaeological Park’s Ancient Art and Technology Weekend by hearing Chickasaw Storyteller, Amy Bluemel, recount The Story of Flint!
Read More from Ancient Art and Technology Weekend: The Story of Flint
Celebrate Moundville Archaeological Park’s Ancient Art and Technology Weekend by making a Clovis Point!
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Due to severe weather and The University of Alabama instructions, the Alabama Museum of Natural History, The Gorgas House Museum, Moundville Archaeological Park and Museum, and the Mildred Westervelt Warner Transportation Museum are closed today.
Moundville Archaeological Park’s lighting issues in the Jones Archaeological Museum galleries have been fixed! Enjoy visiting the museum when you come to the park!
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Moundville Archaeological Park is experiencing lighting issues in the Jones Archaeological Museum galleries so they will be closed today and will not re-open until further notice. The cafe and gift shop will remain open as will the grounds.
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Nestled along the banks of the Black Warrior River, UA’s Moundville Archaeological Park (MAP) hosts its annual Birdfest Friday and Saturday, April 9-10, 2021. As a member of the West Alabama Birding Trail, Moundville Archaeological Park has held a bird outing as part of its Saturday in the Park program for the last several years.
Join Moundville Archaeological Park online to celebrate Ancient Art and Technology on March 26th and 27th!
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Nature is all around us and ready to explore! Join us for a virtual camp that gives you the tools to get to know the natural world through personal nature collections and nature journals. The camp may be virtual, but the activities are real!
New research unveiled the earliest evidence of octopus predation in the fossil record. The evidence consists of tiny holes drilled in the clams they preyed upon during the Cretaceous period about 75 million years ago.
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Curated by University of Alabama student volunteer Allison Mansour, the Stitching Together Tuscaloosa’s History exhibition utilizes the 2019 Tuscaloosa Bicentennial Quilt which was created as a celebration of Tuscaloosa’s ever-changing and diversifying communities.