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Flagstaff, Arizona, to the Grand Canyon






Visit Arboretum At Flagstaff Arboretum At Flagstaff
The Arboretum at Flagstaff is a botanical garden, research station, and environmental education center. Our goal is to help you better understand the plants and plant communities of the world-renowned Colorado Plateau, home to such natural wonders as Grand Canyon and Zion National Parks.
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Museum of Northern Arizona Presents Lost Dinosaur Exhibit
A once-in-a-lifetime find in 2000 by Museum of Northern Arizona paleontologists led to the discovery of the most complete therizinosaur skeleton ever found... (More...)
The Flagstaff Arboretum Offers A Variety of Family-Friendly Exhibits and Programs For the Whole Family To Enjoy
There are an amazing array of activities, workshops, projects and interesting little get-togethers year round at the Arboretum in Flagstaff all in the name of enjoying... (More...)


Flagstaff, Arizona: Flagstaff is a place to escape the desert's heat, to enjoy the flavor of the Old West as well as a lively urban scene, and to connect with nature in some of the most beautiful and peaceful places you'll ever set foot in. Just about an hour away from the Grand Canyon and 40 minutes from Sedona, Flagstaff is an ideal spot from which to base your exploration of Northern Arizona.



The native people of the Colorado Plateau have been living in the Flagstaff area for thousands of years, long before European settlers began to enjoy the resources of its abundant forests and rich meadows, and before Phoenix residents began building summer homes to escape the Valley of the Sun's blistering heat. (At 7,000 feet above sea level, summer temperatures in Flagstaff are regularly 25 degrees cooler than those in Phoenix.) While the previous commerce conduits of the railroad and Route 66 still criss-cross the town, Northern Arizona University, with about 18,000 students, is the main economic engine in Flagstaff today.

Looming over the town is the serrated profile of the San Francisco Peaks, with Humphrey's Peak at the highest point of 12,643 feet. These mountains are sacred to the Navajo and the Hopi people, long regarded as a source of physical and spiritual medicine and as the place where the world of man and the gods intersect. The Hopi's Kachinas, spirit-beings who are said to intercede in nearly every aspect of man's life, reside among the Peaks for half the year, then descend to maintain the natural order of the world.

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