Main Page About the Museum
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Las
Cruces Friends School Outreach
Established
in 1959, the New Mexico University Museum has provided forty-eight years of
service to the university and the community. The
University Museum assists New Mexico
State University in providing quality
education, advancing knowledge and
enriching culture through research
and
providing service to the people of New
Mexico. The Museum has served the
university and surrounding communities
since 1959. Through its care and maintenance
of donated ethnographic, historic
and prehistoric objects it preserves an
important part of Southwestern and Border region culture and
history. The Museum also encourages student and faculty research on
our diverse cultural materials. Additionally, Museum faculty members
supervise independent student
research projects each semester.
The
Museum collections are primarily anthropological (archaeological and ethnographic) with secondary collections in history and the
natural sciences. Anthropological collections document the cultural diversity of the border in the Greater
Southwest and northern Mexico. The preservation and cataloguing of
collections are Museum priorities to promote research and access to cultural
materials. Exhibits are developed by students and staff as well as brought
in from other institutions. These exhibits focus on the traditions of
on-going historic and prehistoric cultures. Past exhibits have explored
life in 1930s' New Mexico, Southwestern weavings, prehistoric cultural
interactions along the Gila River, the Fremont expedition, and everyday life in
a Las Cruces Hispanic household at the turn of the 20th century. The
Museum also provides public lectures on a variety of topics. These lectures
feature faculty, staff, and visiting experts who present insights on cultural
traditions, events, and activities
Location:
We are located on the University campus in Kent Hall at University Avenue and
Solano Drive.
Hours of Operation:
Museum exhibits are free and open to the public. The Museum Gallery is open Tuesday through Saturday, 12:00 noon until 4:00 pm. (Special arrangements can be made for school classes and special functions.)
Contact:
For general inquires:
e-mail: museum@nmsu.edu
Telephone: (505) 646-3739
FAX: (505) 646-1419
Mailing Address:
New Mexico State University Museum
Kent Hall, MSC 3564
P.O. Box 30001
Las
Cruces, NM 88003-8001
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MUSEUM MISSION STATEMENT |
The mission of the New Mexico State University Museum derives from and is
consistent with the mission of New Mexico State University. The museum's
mission, therefore, is to assist New Mexico State University in providing
quality education for its students, advancing knowledge and enriching culture
through research, and providing educational service to the people of New Mexico.
Deriving from and consistent with its status as a sub-department of the
Department of Sociology and Anthropology, the Museum places special emphasis on
education, research, and service that preserve and maintain the state's
multicultural heritage.
Teaching
The Museum's teaching responsibility is to support teaching and other instructional activities in
the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, the College of Arts and Sciences, and other
NMSU academic units. Specifically, the Museum provides formal instruction in Museum Studies
to undergraduate and graduate students from a variety of disciplines, including Anthropology, Art,
Art History and Public History.
Research
The Museum's research responsibility is to support research by faculty and students in the
Department of Sociology and Anthropology, the College of Arts and Sciences, and other NMSU
academic units. The Museum supports, as appropriate, the dissemination of research by faculty
and students. The Museum facilitates collaboration among NMSU departments, programs, and
colleges. The Museum facilitates cooperation between NMSU and private, state, federal, and
international organizations, institutions, and agencies.
Service
The Museum's service responsibility is to support the local, state, national, and greater world
communities through educational outreach and cultural conservation activities, in association with
the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, the College of Arts and Sciences, and other
NMSU units. The Museum will especially promote educational outreach and cultural conservation
activities that preserve and maintain the state's and region's multicultural heritage.
Collection, Conservation, and Exhibition of Material Culture
The Museum has a special responsibility to collect, conserve, and exhibit material objects relating
to the multicultural heritage of the peoples of our state and region. Primarily, the Museum collects
and curates significant anthropological and archaeological materials that relate to this multicultural
heritage. Secondarily, the Museum collects and curates objects relating to the history and natural
science of our state and region. These activities support the Museum's teaching, research, and
service missions and help meet NMSU's legal responsibilities relating to the collection and curation
of material objects.
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MEET THE STAFF |

Dr. Monte McCrossin is Director of the University Museum and Associate Professor of Anthropology in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at New Mexico State University. He was educated at the University of California at Berkeley, where he received his Ph.D. in 1994. He has been at New Mexico State University since 2000. In addition to the Museum, his primary interests are in the fossil record of primate and human evolution. He has conducted anthropological fieldwork for many years in Kenya and is currently carrying out a research project concerning human origins at the site of Qasr as-Sahabi in Libya. He has conducted research on museum collections in the U.S., Mexico, the U.K., France, Spain, Italy, Swizerland, Kenya, and Japan. While continuing to maintain the Museum's regional focus, Dr. McCrossin hopes to increase the Museum's educational and research activities in interdisciplinary and international directions.
Dr.
Terry Reynolds
is the Curator of
Collections
and Exhibits for the Museum. She is an anthropologist who has
done extensive research on
New Mexico peoples, history,
arts, and crafts.
She received her Ph.D. from the University of British Columbia and was Director of the University
of Denver Graduate Museums Studies Program before arriving at NMSU in 1998.
Here, she is
primarily responsible for the management of the Museum's collections and the
planning and implementation of the Museum's exhibits.
Dr. John G. Cabrera
is a retired engineering geologist who presently is a volunteer Co-Manager
for the School Outreach program of the Museum. He attended the City College of New York,
The University of Tennessee, and Cornell University where he obtained his Ph.D. He did most of
his research in Brazil, where he studied the foundation conditions of hydroelectric projects,
including the world's largest-Itaipu. Dr. Cabrera was also an Associate Professor in the Geological
Engineering program of NMSU.
Dr. Cabrera helped design the first sets of "Museum in a Bag" kits to teach Las Cruces school
children how to recognize and appreciate the importance of minerals and rocks.
He also
collaborated in creating the second set of kits on "Indians of the Southwest."
As Co-Manager of the Museum's School Outreach Program, Ann's desire is
to bring the "Museum to the Children" and the "Children to the Museum."
Amy Harvey and
Jennifer Frederick are the Museum's Public Programs Coordinators.
They schedule and
conduct exhibit tours and workshops for school children, design and
direct our Saturday Family Workshops, supervise activities in the “Kid’s Corner,” and conduct other public outreach
programs. Amy and Jennifer
skillfully and enthusiastically
combine arts and crafts activities and lessons that relate to Museum current
exhibits. Amy and Jennifer
help children explore the many facets of exposing them to different
cultures through hands-on activities related to Museum exhibits, giving them a
tangible connection to those cultures. Amy is currently working towards
her Master's in English and Jennifer is working towards her Master's in
Anthropology from New Mexico State University
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MEET THE CURATORS |
Dr. Rani Alexander (Associate Professor of Anthropology; Curator of Mesoamerican
Archaeology and Ethnohistory) received her Ph.D. from the University of New Mexico in 1993,
and has been at NMSU since 1996. She studies the archaeology of pre-Columbian and Colonial
period civilizations in Mesoamerica. Her research focuses on colonial ethnohistory, political
economy, and faunal analysis. Recently, she has completed a study of Late Colonial period (AD
1750-1847) settlement and site structure of the pre-Caste War communities of the Parroquia de
Yaxcaba, Yucatan, Mexico.
Dr. Christine Eber (Associate Professor of Anthropology; Curator of Maya Ethnography) is a
cultural anthropologist who received her Ph.D. from the State University of New York at Buffalo in
1991. She has been at NMSU since 1995. Her research focuses on gender, art, religion, and
Mesoamerican ethnology. Since 1987 she has been studying Maya women's participation in social
movements in Chiapas, Mexico, including women's weaving cooperatives.
Dr. Jon Hunner (Associate Professor of History; Curator of History) received his Ph.D. from the
University of New Mexico in 1996. In that same year he arrived at NMSU to become Director of
the Public History program. In this capacity, he has supervised numerous projects in historic
preservation and historical research in the local area and state.
Dr. Wenda Trevathan (Professor of Anthropology; Curator of Physical Anthropology) is a
biological anthropologist who earned her Ph.D. from the University of Colorado In 1980. She has
been at NMSU since 1983. Her research concerns aspects of human reproduction including
childbirth, maternal behavior, sexuality, and menopause. She is the recipient of the Margaret Mead
Award from the American Anthropological Association/Society for Applied Anthropology (1990)
and the NMSU Westhafer Award for Excellence in Research (1998).
Dr. Daniel Villa (Associate Professor of Spanish; Curator of Border Studies) received his Ph.D.
from the University of New Mexico in 1992 and started at NMSU that same year. His research
concerns Spanish language loss and maintenance in the United States, the discourse structure of
Spanish dialogue, the Dynamics of Language contact in the Southwest, and inter-institutional
approaches to language preservation. He teaches a broad range of courses which reflect this
research. His fieldwork centers on New Mexican and northern Mexican varieties of Spanish and
he has collaborated with professors and teachers in the area in order to develop teaching strategies
and curriculum for working with at-risk high school students.
Dr. William Walker (Associate Professor of Anthropology; Curator of Southwest Archaeology) is
an archaeologist who received his Ph.D. from the University of Arizona in 1995. He came to
NMSU in 1996. he specializes in the study of prehistoric ritual and has participated in
archaeological excavations in Arizona, New York, and Argentina. He directed the
NMSU archaeology field school on the Gray Ranch in southern Hidalgo county. This
work contributes to a larger research project, La Frontera Archaeological Program, that
explores the
ritual organization of the Cases Grandes Interaction Sphere in Southern New Mexico.
Dr. Andrew Wiget (Professor of English, Curator of Folklife) recently joined our
illustrious group of Curators. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Utah in 1977, and is
now Director of the New Mexico Heritage Center at NMSU. His principal interest is assisting
indigenous peoples in preserving their cultural traditions. His first major fieldwork was among the
Mistassini Cree of northern Quebec, Canada. In the southwest, he has worked with the Navajo and
Apache, as well as among the Zuni for whom he has directed several programs documenting oral
history and folklore. Currently, he is engaged in a project among the indigenous Khanty of
Western Siberia to document their traditional way of life and assist them in securing their land base
as a protected area.