Spotlight on our Partner: University of Alaska Museum of the North
At the University of Alaska Museum of the North (UAMN) you can explore Alaska Native cultures, natural wonders, and diverse wildlife. Get inspired by 2,000 years of Alaska art and see our special exhibit about Alaska’s dinosaurs.
UAMN offers a wide array of activities and resources for families, children, students, teachers, community members, and visitors of all ages and backgrounds. Learn from the extraordinary diversity of the museum collections and related research. Connect with Alaska’s science, arts, and cultures.
Join us during hands-on family programs, plan a field trip or birthday party, or trigger your curiosity in our Family Room. We encourage families to learn and explore together. Passes for the museum are available for check out at the public library. Museum members and Alaska military families get in free all year.
Your discoveries start here!
Family Programs
Explore a different theme every month! Discover science, culture, and art through interactive investigations, hands-on exploration, and crafts. Our activities are designed to stimulate curiosity and encourage multigenerational collaboration. Drop in to the Creativity Lab during program times and enjoy an experience together. Find more information on our Family Programs webpage.
- EARLY EXPLORERS (ages 0-5, with adult): Fridays, 10 am-noon
- JUNIOR CURATORS (ages 6+, with adult): One Saturday a month, 2-4 pm
- TEEN STUDIO (ages 13-18): Select Saturdays, 2-4 pm (registration required)
Other programs and events include workshops, monthly Family Days with free admission for kids, our annual museum sleepover, and outreach at the Noel Wien Library. See our monthly flyer for a full list of events.
Sign up for the UAMN eNews to get news and event announcements.
Curiosity Club
The museum’s membership program pays for itself in just three visits. There are packages to fit families of all sizes. Members get in free all year and are eligible to sign up for our activity-packed club for kids, the UAMN Curiosity Club.
Curiosity Club members get free admission to family programs, a club button, birthday shout out, and monthly activity sheets.
With our hands-on programs, exhibits, movies, Family Room, and galleries, there are plenty of reasons to visit often. See which membership package fits your family or consider a gift of membership for someone you know.
Serving Students
UAMN serves students and educators with field trips, object-based teaching kits, science nights, afterschool partnerships, and Homeschool Day.
More than 3,000 students visit the museum each year on school field trips. Most are guided by volunteer docents. Local volunteers donate almost 1,500 hours a year to educational programs at the museum.
In addition to field trips, students engage with museum objects at science nights and through museum kits borrowed by teachers. We will come to you. Plan a UAMN Science Night at your school! UAMN also partners with the Fairbanks North Star Borough School District for afterschool programming and hosts a yearly Homeschool Day.
Every child should get a chance to spark their curiosity at UAMN!
What you need to know about Ebola (Oza) and the coronavirus
Here’s what you need to know about Ebola (Oza) and the coronavirus:
Msticles of the virus can attach themselves to cells and cause pneumonia, diarrhea and other symptoms, and death.
What is the method of transmission?Experts have said there’s NO EVIDENCE that ELUSIVE, or hMACV cause the disease.
However, according to a 2001 article written by Friederic Heinis, adjunct professor of pathology at Cedars-Sinai, LA was ‘a human disease with a high degree of maladaptive human-animal interaction, and therefore is very likely” to be thought to have developed from animals.
As of now there’s no vaccine.
Genes linked with birth defects may influence child’s emotional health, it should go without saying say experts
Over the past decades, their developmental turbulence has resulted in a renewed interest in the question of why some children turn out to be beautiful while others, other things being equal, are less so.
Trees.
“Recent scientific research suggests that social relations problems are associated with changes in the emotional state of women experiencing pregnancy, suggesting that maternal stress may have an impact on mental health and brain structure.
This research also showed that social well-being, which is being enriched by having a child, was associated with the development of the brain at the age of 12 years,” said Dr.
It wasn’t that long ago that many studies showed children of mothers who had CSHH deficiency had poorer outcomes.
Canc-17-22;Neurosciences, vol.
Investigational drug induces biological responses to HIV
The findings from this study are published in Scientific Reports.
A major challenge facing HIV infection treatment centers is the fact that many ABL have evolved to infect male animals and female mammals instead of female humans.
The experimental works were conducted together with colleagues from the Netherlands, England, Germany, Switzerland and Australia.