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Sept 2, 2010

NYC Arts: The Complete Guide to Art and Culture

Also Visit NY State Arts

Kid Fun in Grown-Up Museums

Art museums are smart. They know that in terms of creativity and imagination, kids have a lot in common with the artists featured on their walls. To acclimate kids to new ways of looking and discussing what they see, grown-up museums are tailoring programs to young people and their families. It's a great way to groom future museum-goers and artists. 

Highway of an Empire: The Great Inca Road

American Museum of Natural History
Central Park West at 79th Street
(between 77th and 81st Streets)
New York, NY  10024
Tel: (212) 769-5200
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Map
$9.00 children, $12.00 seniors, students, $16.00 adults.

Dates

Sat, Oct 17, 2009 – Sun, Sept 26, 2010

Hours

Mon – Sun: 10 am – 5:45 pm

Closed Thanksgiving and Christmas.
This exhibition of over 35 photographs features the 25,000 miles of roads and trails that the Incas built six centuries ago in South America. On view in the IMAX Corridor on the second floor, the exhibition explores the roads that crisscrossed the Incan realm, radiating out from Cuzco, the Inca capital tucked in the mountains of modern-day Peru.

The vast Inca Empire owed its reach and power to this extensive and intricate network of roads. Linking forts, religious sites, and administrative centers from the Pacific coast to the Amazonian rainforest, the Inca roads allowed armies and imperial officials to conquer and then control the largest empire in the Americas.

The photographs reveal the diversity of this road system—from broad paved highways to woven suspension bridges to beaten tracks through barren desert—and of the landscape through which it travels. Other highlights include round terraces of Moray; a tropical forest located along the Amazon tributary near the present-day border between Peru and Bolivia; Sondor, a terraced knoll that may have been used for religious rituals; the Huascarán peak in the Cordillera Blanca, the highest in Peru and one of the highest in the Andes; Laguna de Los Condores, where in 1996 a local worker discovered a cache of some 200 mummy bundles tucked in a cliff side high above a lake; Andeans gathering a potato crop; and maps of the road network.

Visitors interested in learning more about the subjects featured in Highway of An Empire can also visit the museum’s Hall of South American Peoples.


 

  • Directions: Subway: B, C to 81st Street - Museum of Natural History

About this Organization

American Museum of Natural History

The largest natural history museum in the world has a mission commensurately monumental in scope. Permanent hall exhibitions focus on dinosaurs, mammals, ocean life, geology and more. The Rose Center for Earth and Space explores the entire universe.
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American Museum of Natural History Listings

  • Spider Silk Tapestry

    Wed, Sept 23, 2009 – Mon, Sept 6, 2010 This contemporary textile made of golden-colored spider silk measures 11 feet by 4 feet and took four years to make using a painstaking technique developed more than 100 years ago.

  • Double Feature of Space Shows

    Ongoing In Passport to the Universe, see close views of star fields and planets and experience an exhilarating flight into the Orion Nebula, out of our galaxy and deep into intergalactic space. The Search for Life: Are We Alone? asks if there are life forms beyond planet Earth.

  • Lizards and Snakes: Alive!

    Sat, March 6, 2010 – Thurs, Sept 2, 2010 Reptiles with scales are known as squamates and, as this close encounter with live animals shows us, they're full of surprises. Big or small; fierce or shy; four legs, two legs or no legs at all, they're all lizards and snakes, an ancient group which is more diverse than mammals and as old as dinosaurs.

  • All American Museum of Natural History Listings