The Library of Congress > LCCN Permalink

View this record in:  MARCXML | LC Authorities & Vocabularies | VIAF (Virtual International Authority File)External Link

Museo Nacional de Antropología (Mexico)

LC control no.n 80033871
Descriptive conventionsrda
Corporate name headingMuseo Nacional de Antropología (Mexico)
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities  or the  LC Catalog
Variant(s)Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (Mexico). Museo Nacional de Antropología
Mexican National Museum of Anthropology
Mexico. Mexican National Museum of Anthropology
Mexico. Museo Nacional de Antropología
Mexico. National Museum of Anthropology
MNA (Museum)
Museo de Antropología e Historia de México
Museo Nacional de Antropología e Historia
Narodowe Muzeum Antropologii w Meksyku
National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico)
See alsoMuseo Nacional de Arqueología, Historia y Etnografía (Mexico)
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities
Hierarchical superior: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (Mexico)
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities
Beginning date1964
LocatedMexico City (Mexico)
Found inMaski meksykańskie z kolekcji ... 1976: t.p. (Narodowe Muzeum Antropologii w Meksyku)
Inventario del Fondo Franciscano ... 1978- (x-ref.) v. 1, t.p. (Museo de Antropología e Historia de México) p. ix (Museo Nacional de Antropología e Historia)
Phone call to Francisco Morales, 2/26/79 (Museo Nacional de Antropología e Historia is the same as the Museo Nacional de Antropología)
National Museum of Anthropology, Mexico City, 1970: t.p. (National Museum of Anthropology) p. 13 (name changed in 1939 from National Museum of Archaeology, History, and Ethnography)
La sala del preclásico altiplano, 1994: cover (Museo Nacional de Antropología) p. 9, in text (MNA)
Wikipedia, Aug. 28, 2014 (The Museo Nacional de Antropología (MNA, or National Museum of Anthropology) is a national museum of Mexico. It is the most visited museum in Mexico. Located within Chapultepec Park in Mexico City, the museum contains significant archaeological and anthropological artifacts from the pre-Columbian heritage of Mexico, such as the Stone of the Sun (or the Aztec calendar stone) and the 16th-century Aztec statue of Xochipilli; it was designed in 1964 by Pedro Ramírez Vázquez, Jorge Campuzano and Rafael Mijares)