A Clean Future for the Colorado River: The Environmental Learning Center at Lake Havasu City
The recent coronavirus (COVID-19) situation is affecting us all in many different ways. We appreciate the complexity of its impact, and Arizona Humanities respects the need to... Read More
Last Chance in Arizona: Water/Ways Makes Final Stop at Lake Havasu City
The history of any desert community begins with people and water, but one Arizona city’s relationship with the element is a little different from most... Read More
Conservation is a Group Effort at Black Canyon Heritage Park
Coots, ducks, egrets and herons gather at a desert oasis for food and rest. Endangered desert pupfish and Gila topminnows thrive in its shallow waters.... Read More
Water/Ways in Black Canyon City: A Rural Community Responds to Urban Water Pressures
Travelers who glimpse a swath of green along the interstate skirting central Arizona’s Black Canyon City may not realize they are missing a gem. Black... Read More
“Part of a Larger Story”: Borders, Connections and Gabriela Galup’s Immersive Art
“Within ourselves, we know many things,” performing artist Gabriela Galup observes. It is not always necessary to grasp concepts intellectually: to touch, feel, and share... Read More
Tubac’s “Rio Compartido/Shared River” Art Exhibit: A River That Blurs Borders
Above: Nancy Valentine, Lowe House Project Program Coordinator, and Edilia Chacon, Cultural Promotion Director at the Mexican Consulate in Nogales, take in the exhibit Rio... Read More
Water/Ways Celebrates Tubac, Santa Cruz River
Shannon Stone, Executive Director of Tubac Presidio State Historic Park and Museum, is breathless over the Smithsonian coming to the Santa Cruz River. This isn’t... Read More