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Durango Colorado Business Directory, News, and Community Resources
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Community Links / Museums 
  Business Name Description
Anasazi Heritage Center Canyons of the Ancients The Anasazi Heritage Center is a museum of the Ancestral Puebloan (or Anasazi) culture and other Native cultures in the Four Corners region. It is also the starting point for visits to Canyons of the Ancients National Monument. The museum features permanent exhibits on archaeology, local history, and Native American cultures interpretive programs archaeological sites changing special exhibits and events traveling exhibits for loan educational resources for teachers a research library a research collection of over 3 million artifacts and records from archaeological projects in Southwest Colorado picnic area a book and gift shop operated by our nonprofit partner, the Canyonlands Natural History Association The Anasazi Heritage Center is Southwest Colorado's premier archaeological museum, operated by the Bureau of Land Management since 1988. All museum facilities are wheelchair-accessible.
Childrens Museum of Durango The Children's Museum of Durango is located on the 2nd floor of the Durango Arts Center in historic downtown Durango. The 1,100 square feet exhibit gallery is packed with interesting things for kids to see and do. Over 12,000 children and adults visited our museum last year. Steady annual growth over the last ten years means we are ready to expand to larger facilities and serve a broader age range of youths. In 2001, we set our sights on a move to the historic Durango Power House at 14th Street and Camino del Rio by the Animas River. Construction began in 2004 with an expected 2009 opening.
The Animas Museum Within the walls of the historic 1904 Animas City School lies the exciting world of La Plata County History. Through our exhibits, programs, photo archives, and research library we will transport you back to Durango's early days. Make the Animas Museum one of your first stops in town and your visit to Durango is guaranteed to be a more enjoyable and colorful experience.
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Durango News
Durangoherald.com
  • Sweet summer sounds
    The streets shook as the noisy two-wheeled beasts, a few hundred strong, revved and roared their way through downtown Durango. Sunday's Motorcycle Parade, arguably Durango's loudest annual event, could be heard blocks away.
  • Durango wants a taste of tour
    More than 12 months ago, Anne Barney, Mary Monroe and Gaige Sippy sat down over a cup of coffee.
  • Even now, civil rights is a hot issue in Deep South Alabama
    SELMA, Ala. - The afternoon sun cooks my uncovered head. Below, to my left, the lazy, mud-brown Alabama River flows by. To my right, rusted trucks zip past within reach of the narrow sidewalk.
  • Windows at City Hall to start closing earlier
    Starting Tuesday, two offices in City Hall will end public interface an hour earlier because employees are stretched thin.
  • Blessing the choppers
  • Fuel efficiency is a burning issue at the library
    I pulled into the library in my little, gutless 36-mpg car and found an SUV in one "fuel efficient" parking space and a 1970s-era pickup in another. Assuming that being at the library implies literacy and the ability to read signs, perhaps there's some other reasoning here. What exactly did they have in mind as energy "efficient" when they, whomever they are, designated those spots? - Easily
  • Labor Day 2010
    In the 1930s, unemployment plagued this country. Not only was the unemployment rate high, perhaps 25 percent at its peak, but in those days, most households had only one wage earner. When he was out of work, there was no family income to speak of. And even those who had jobs at the time were often underemployed or employed part time.
  • FLC back to form vs. West Texas AM
    The No. 1-ranked Fort Lewis College men's soccer team needed a spark after uncharacteristically dropping its opener to No. 18 Colorado Mines on Friday in Golden, a loss which equaled the team's total from the entire 2009 national championship season.
  • Deuces wild for Skyhawks
    It seemed like only a matter of time.
  • High cholesterol can endanger heart health
    More than 1 in 5 Americans have high cholesterol, which increases the risk for cardiovascular disease, including the risk for heart attack, stroke and poor circulation.
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