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Attractions

ASARCO Mineral Discovery Center

W. Pima Mine Road (about 20 minutes south of Tucson), Sahuarita.
Phone 520-625-7513.
Tuesday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm. Free admission to the Mineral Discovery Center exhibits, Discovery Theater, and gift shop.
The center takes you from the beginning of Arizona mining to the present-day industry with exhibits about geology, minerals, mining methods and equipment. An optional one-hour bus tour of the ASARCO open-pit mine and mill is available.

Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum
2021 N. Kinney Road (30 minutes northwest of downtown), Tucson.
Phone 520-883-2702.
The Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum is open from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. October through February and from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. March through September.
Visit a zoo, a natural history museum, and a botanical garden when you visit the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum. The attraction has an array of wildlife, including Gila monsters and hummingbirds. The museum sits in the Tucson Mountains and is perfectly blended with the breathtaking scenery.

Arizona State Museum
The Arizona State Museum (ASM) is an affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution and is the oldest and largest anthropology museum in the region. ASM demonstrates the life of the southwest with research projects and collections. The museum is open Monday through Friday from 9:30 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Biosphere 2 Center
Oracle Road (Highway 77) at mile marker 96.5 (about 20 minutes north of Tucson), Oracle.
Daily 9 am-4 pm.
Phone 520-838-6200.
Built in the late 1980s with $150 million in funding from Texas oil magnate Edward Bass, Biosphere 2 is an airtight replica of Earth's environment. This 7,200,000 cubic-foot sealed glass structure contains five biomes, including a 900,000-gallon ocean, a desert, a rain forest, agricultural areas, and a human habitat. Biosphere 2 was built in the interest of space travel and with the possibility of colonizing the Moon or Mars in mind. By building Biosphere 2 and sealing people inside, scientists hoped to learn what problems would arise from living in a closed system. To this end, a colony of eight people from different countries set about to live inside Biosphere 2 for two years in 1991. Since then, there have been no resident crews living inside Biosphere 2 and no future human habitation is planned. The guided tour leads visitors Under the Glass to experience first-hand the Center's re-created "miniworld." Visitors are advised to wear comfortable shoes as there is a lot of walking.

Romero House
102 W. Washington St.
El Presidio District, Tucson.
Phone 520-624-2333.
This is the 1868 home of carpenter Leonardo Romero, who helped construct the original St. Augustine Cathedral. It is said that this home included part of the original Presidio wall. Sunday noon-4 pm, Monday-Saturday 10 am-4 pm (closed Monday June-August). 10 am-1 pm).

Casino of the Sun
7406 S. Camino de Oeste.
Phone 520-879-5400)
Daily 24 hours.
Take Interstate 10 to I-19 South, exit at Valencia and turn right. At Camino de Oeste, turn left for Casino of the Sun.

Casino del Sol

Take Interstate 10 to I-19 South, exit at Valencia and turn right. At Camino de Oeste continue straight for Casino del Sol.
5655 W. Valencia Road.
Phone 800-344-9435).
Daily 24 hours.
Dining and gaming in the form of slots, blackjack and video poker, video craps and video roulette await visitors to these two casinos operated by the Pascua Yaqui Tribe.

Catalina State Park
Oracle Road (Highway 77, about 20 minutes from downtown), Tucson.
Phone 520-628-5798.
Daily 5 am-10 pm, Visitor Center open daily 8 am-5 pm.
History and nature come together at this park. The Romero Ruin Interpretive Trail leads to an ancient Hohokam People village, and the rest of the park offers fantastic views of the Catalina Mountains' cliffs, canyons, domes and spires. You may even see bighorn sheep

Colossal Cave Mountain Park
16711 Old Spanish Trail (about 16 miles east of Tucson)
Phone 520-647-7275.
16 March-15 September Monday-Saturday 8 am-6 pm, Sunday 8 am-7 pm; 16 September-15 March Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm, Sunday 9 am-6 pm.
This dormant mountain cave is filled with fantastic formations stalactites, stalagmites, helictites and flowstone, and it's also filled with history. You'll learn about the bandits and train robbers who once used the caves as a hideout and the story of how the caves were discovered and opened to the public. The guided cave tour goes down about six and a half stories, and you must walk back up, so be prepared for a slightly strenuous outing. The temperature inside the cave remains about 70 F, so it is a pleasant place to visit any time of the year.

Desert Diamond Casino (New)
The newest Desert Diamond is located just seven minutes south of Valencia Road on
I I9.
Phone 520-294-7777.
Monday-Friday 9 am-4 am, Saturday and Sunday
24 hours.
Two locations operated by the Tohono O'odham Nation offer slots, blackjack, bingo and satellite Keno.

Desert Diamond Casino (Original)

The original Desert Diamond Casino, just west of the Tucson International Airport on South Nogales Highway, is open daily 24 hours.

Edward Nye Fish House

120 N. Main Ave.
El Presidio District, Tucson.
Phone 520-624-2333.
Sunday noon-4 pm, Monday-Saturday 10 am-4 pm (closed Monday June-August). (free admission on Sunday 10 am-1 pm).
This excellent example of a territorial-style adobe home was built in 1867 on the site of the original Presidio's military barracks. Its thick walls and saguaro rib ceilings are typical of the architecture of that period. Today, the property houses the Goodman Pavilion of Western Art, which is part of the Tucson Museum of Art.

Flandrau Science Center and Planetarium
1601 University Blvd. (at Cherry Avenue on the University of Arizona campus), Tucson.
Phone 520-621-7827
Sunday 1-5 pm, Monday-Wednesday 9 am-5 pm, Thursday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm and 7-9 pm.
The University of Arizona's on-campus observatory, science center and planetarium. Interactive science exhibits educate and entertain, and the multimedia planetarium focuses on everything from ancient cultural practices and beliefs to the latest scientific discoveries.

Fort Lowell Museum
2900 N. Craycroft Road (in Fort Lowell Park), Tucson.
Phone 520-885-3832.
A few miles outside the original Presidio, this fort was the regimental headquarters of the 6th U.S. Cavalry. The fort fell to ruin when it was closed in the late 1800s, but the Arizona Historical Society has restored the commanding officer's quarters and stocked it with furnishings and artifacts from the period. Wednesday-Saturday 10 am-4 pm. 12-18, free under 12 (free admission first Saturday of each month).

International Wildlife Museum
4800 W. Gates Pass Road (near Old Tucson Studios), Tucson.
Phone 520-617-1439
Monday-Friday 9 am-5 pm, Saturday and Sunday 9 am-6 pm
The Safari Club International's nonprofit educational institute was founded in 1988 to educate visitors about Arizona's native wildlife, plus mammals, insects and birds from around the world. More than 400 species are on display, with many hands-on exhibits. A restaurant and gift shop are on-site, too.

International Wildlife Museum
This interactive attraction has more than 400 species of mammals, birds, and insects from around the world. Unlike zoos, the International Wildlife Museum doesn't collect animals for exhibition. Animals are entrusted to the museum via donations. The museum also has a 98-seat movie theater that shows wildlife and natural history films at 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. The International Wildlife Museum is open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and on Saturday and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

J. Knox Corbett House
180 N. Main Ave., El Presidio District, Tucson.
Phone 520-624-2333.
Sunday noon-4 pm, Monday-Saturday 10 am-4 pm (closed Monday June-August). Unlike the adobe and southwestern-style homes that surround it, the Corbett House was built in mission-revival style in the early 1900s. The house was once the home of Tucson's postmaster, but now abounds with rare arts and crafts. Be sure to see the medicine cabinets full of healing powders.

Kitt Peak Observatory

The observatory is open daily from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. except on Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's Day. There are daily guided tours at the Kitt Peak Observatory, which is part of the National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO). Kitt Peak operates three nighttime telescopes, 19 optical telescopes, and two radio telescopes.

La Casa Cordova

175 N. Meyer Ave., El Presidio District, Tucson
Sunday noon-4 pm, Monday-Saturday 10 am-4 pm (closed Monday June-August).
(free admission on Sunday 10 am-1 pm).
Phone 520-624-2333.
Tucson's oldest home, built in the mid-1800s is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and offers exhibits chronicling El Presidio District history. If you're visiting Tucson during the winter months, be sure to check out
El Nacimiento, an elaborate holiday nativity scene depicting life in the Presidio and in Mexico, with more than 300 earthenware figurines.

Mount Lemmon Ski Valley

Most people don't think of snow and skiing when they think of Tucson, but a trip to Mount Lemmon Ski Valley will change that perception. Mount Lemmon is more than 9,000 feet tall and is the southernmost ski area in the United States. People go skiing here from mid-December to early April. The site is an hour from Tucson and has ski equipment rentals, ski instruction, a restaurant and snack bar, and a gift shop.

Mission San Xavier del Bac
1950 W. San Xavier Road (on the Tohono O'odham Reservation
10 mi/16 km south of Tucson on I-19),
Tucson. Phone 520-294-2624.
The original mission founded by Father Kino has been expanded and restored since it was erected in 1694. This "White Dove of the Desert" is a superb example of Spanish-mission architecture and houses a museum with religious artifacts and relics of the native peoples of the area. Gift shop and traditional Tohono O'odham arts and crafts shops on the premises. Daily 8 am-5 pm. Masses are held throughout the day, and self-guided tours are permitted. Free, but donations are accepted.

Old Tucson Studios

201 S. Kinney Road (about 25 minutes northwest of downtown), Tucson.
Phone 520-883-0100.
Daily 10 am-6 pm.
This replica of an 1880s frontier town is part television and film studio, part amusement park. Built in 1939, it has served as the set for more than 300 cowboy movies and TV shows, including
The Quick and the Dead and Gunsmoke. Today, it's still a film studio, but it also has live western shows, a steam train, pony rides and the Western Legends Museum. The site also has major concerts, festivals, sports events, and children's activities.

Pima County Courthouse
115 N. Church Ave.,
El Presidio District, Tucson
This building, completed in 1929, is a good example of Spanish Colonial architecture. Its Moorish mosaic-tiled dome is lovely. A segment of the original Presidio wall (which surrounded Tucson's first settlement) can be viewed inside the building (plaques indicate where the wall once stood in the courtyard). Monday-Friday 9 am-5 pm. Free.