Kalamazoo Valley Museum

Kalamazoo Valley Museum
The back of the Museum. A pedestrian stands in the foreground.
Location within Michigan
Established 1881
Location Kalamazoo, Michigan
Coordinates 42°17′36″N 85°35′02″W / 42.29329°N 85.58392°W / 42.29329; -85.58392
Type History, Science, Technology
Collection size 50,000
Director Bill McElhone
Website Kalamazoo Valley Museum

The Kalamazoo Valley Museum is a "hands-on" museum in Kalamazoo, Michigan. The museum is largely aimed at families, and focuses on science, technology, and history. The museum is operated by Kalamazoo Valley Community College, and admission to the facility is free.[1]

The Museum’s collection dates to an 1881 gift to the Kalamazoo School Board of corals, shells, and rocks from Horace M. Peck, a local banker. In its early years, the Museum acquired natural history specimens, ethnographic materials, and antiquities. Currently, the collection includes over 50,000 items.

The museum has a state-of-the-art, 109-seat planetarium that screens a variety of presentations and programs for school groups and other public audiences.


Exhibits

An inside display wall.

The museum, whose special exhibitions galleries feature an ever-changing variety of traveling exhibits, also features several permanent exhibits. These include:

  • The Mystery of the Mummy: Centered on a 2,300-year-old Ptolemaic-era ancient Egyptian mummy donated to the museum in 1928, the exhibit also features the results of carbon dating, CT-scans, X-rays, and forensic reconstruction done on the mummy. This exhibit also includes artifacts from the museum’s ancient Egyptian collection.
  • Science in Motion: The hands-on exhibits in this gallery's three sections, Energy, Human Body, and Technology, invite visitors of all ages to participate in science by seeing, touching, feeling, hearing, and discovering.
A sarcophagus in the mummy exhibit.
  • On the Trail of History: The history and heritage of the city of Kalamazoo.
  • Kalamazoo Direct To You: Kalamazoo products, including Gibson guitars, Kalamazoo stoves, Upjohn pharmaceuticals, Stryker orthopedic equipment and many more.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.