The
Museo Nacional de Antropología (
MNA, or
National Museum of Anthropology) is a
national museum of
Mexico. Located in the area between
Paseo de la Reforma and Calle Mahatma Gandhi within
Chapultepec Park in
Mexico City, the museum contains significant
archaeological and
anthropological artifacts from the
pre-Columbian heritage of Mexico, such as the
Piedra del Sol (the Stone of the Sun, what has been incorrectly identified as the Aztec calendar) and the 16th-century
Aztec statue of
Xochipilli.
Architecture
Designed in 1963 by
Pedro Ramírez Vázquez,
Jorge Campuzano and Rafael Mijares, it has an impressive architecture with exhibition halls surrounding a patio with a huge pond and a vast square concrete umbrella supported by a single slender pillar (known as "el paraguas",
Spanish for "the umbrella") around which splashes an artificial cascade. The halls are ringed by gardens, many of which contain outdoor exhibits. The museum has 23 rooms for exhibits and covers an area of 79,700 square meters (almost 8
hectares) or 857,890 square feet (almost 20 acres).
Exhibits
Opened in 1964 by President
Adolfo López Mateos, the museum has a number of significant exhibits, such as the Stone of the Sun (depicted below), giant stone heads of the
Olmec civilization that were found in the jungles of
Tabasco and
Veracruz, treasures recovered from the
Maya civilization, the
Sacred Cenote at
Chichen Itza, a replica of the sarcophagal lid from
Pacal's tomb at......
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