The
International Wolf Center advances the survival of wolf populations
by teaching about wolves, their relationship to wild lands and the
human role in their future. The International Wolf Center is the
world's premier wolf interpretive facility. Located in the heart
of the Superior National Forest in Ely, Minnesota, visitors can take
a tour of the Center, view the resident wolf pack and learn from
the Center's award-winning current exhibits. Visit
the Wolf Center's website for more information, hours and directions.
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Established
in 1891, Itasca is
Minnesota's oldest state park. Today, the park totals more than 32,000
acres and includes more than 100 lakes. Here visitors can walk across
the Mississippi as it begins its winding journey to the Gulf of Mexico,
stand under towering pines at Preacher's Grove, visit landmarks of
centuries gone by such as the Itasca Indian Cemetery or Wegmann's
Cabin or explore Wilderness Drive past the 2,000-acre Wilderness
Sanctuary, one of Minnesota's seven National Natural Landmarks.
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The
explosive growth of iron mining attracted thousands to northeastern
Minnesota. Their courage and tenacity transformed a sparsely populated
wilderness into a culturally diverse industrial landscape. Ironworld
Discovery Center, the largest museum complex on the Iron Range, is
dedicated to collecting, preserving and interpreting the history
of Minnesota's Iron Ranges. Visitors to the site discover an
interactive visitor experience, spectacular mine views and one of
the finest library and archival facilities in the upper midwest.
Whether you are visiting the Iron Range for recreation or education,
Ironworld Discovery Center provides a unique look at the Iron Range
that you are sure to find both interesting and enjoyable. Ride a
trolley with spectacular mine views, explore the outdoor exhibits,
take part in cultural heritage activities and uncover links to the
past at the Iron Range Research Center. There's much to see and do! Ironworld
opens for the season May 27 - September 4, 2006. Summer visitor hours
are 9:30 AM - 5:00 PM daily. The Iron Range Research Center is open
throughout the year. Call 1-800-372-6437 or visit
their website for more information.
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A
century slips by when you visit this park. Under ground visitors
wear hard hats and journey down 2,341 feet to listen to the stories
of the mining days. Above ground visitors can explore the dry house,
drill shop, crusher house and engine house. Visitors also can walk
the boardwalk past one of the deepest open mine pits or hike the
trails in the park through a northern hardwood conifer forest, past
the famous Soudan Iron Formation.
The mine tour leads visitors through the world of underground mining.
Visitors don hard hats and enter a "cage" for the descent
into the mine. The 1 1/2-hour mine tour will take you half a mile
down into the earth. Once underground you will be treated to a 3/4
mile train ride to the last and deepest area mined. The mine is 50°F
year-around, so remember to bring a warm jacket or sweater and sturdy
shoes. Public tours run from Memorial Day through the end of September.
There is a charge for the underground mine tour.
The Soudan Underground Laboratory is the leading deep underground
science and engineering laboratory in the United States today. Scientists
from around the world have been working at Soudan for 25 years trying
to answer basic questions about the Universe in which we live: Is
matter completely stable? What is the nature of the fundamental forces?
Can we identify the Dark Matter that seems to permeate our Universe?
Learn about our first neutrino events using the neutrino beam from
Fermilab and see the massive MINOS detector (Main Injector Neutrino
Oscillation Search). Learn about CDMS (Cryogenic Dark Matter Search)
and its continued search for a WIMP (Weakly Interacting Massive Particles).
Soudan Underground Laboratory.
Directions:
Located in Soudan. Take US Highway 169 North through Tower to
Soudan. Once in Soudan follow the directional signs.
Mine Tour: From Memorial Weekend to Labor
Day tours run every hour from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm, Monday to Sunday. After
Labor Day to October 2nd, tours run at 10:00 am, 12:00
pm, 2:00 pm, and 4:00 pm (on the hour from 10 to 4 on weekends).
Physics Tour: From Memorial Weekend to Labor
Day tours run at 10:00 am and 4:00 pm. After Labor Day to October
2nd, tours run at 12:00 pm only.
Admission: (per person): Adults (13 and older):
$9; children 5-12: $6; children 5 and under: no charge. A state
vehicle permit is required at a cost of $7 for a daily permit or
$25 for an annual permit. Rates are subject to change without
notice.
Call 218-753-2245
for more information or visit
their website.
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Experience
the life of a miner as you take an exciting tour of a modern day
mining company. Visitors will slip into steel toe boots and put on
hard hats adding to the experience. These 1 ½ hour tours will walk
you through the mining process of turning iron ore into taconite
pellets. Visitors have the opportunity to watch miners and
their massive equipment at work up close. Watch 30-yard capacity
shovels, so big that a 4X4 truck could fit inside their buckets,
load overburden into 3-story 240-ton mining trucks. See 80-car trains
pulled by three locomotives filled with taconite pellets cruise near
500-foot deep iron laden canyons. Discover 100-ton maintenance trucks,
large drilling rigs and huge bulldozers. A knowledgeable guide will
narrate your adventure. Children who love Tonka Toys® will remember
the experience all their lives. Group tours and school groups welcome. Tour
guide recommended. Available by reservation.
US Steel / Minntac (Mountain Iron)
Tours are available every Friday at 10 am. and 1 p.m. from June 1st
through August 31. Tours depart from the Mountain Iron Senior Center
and last 1-1/2 hours. For more information call 218-749-7299.
Hibbing Taconite Tours (Hibbing)
Tours are available on selected Wednesdays and Thursdays at 12 noon
from June 23rd to August 19th. (no tours will be offered on August
4th and 5th). Tours depart from Ironworld Discovery Center and take
approximately 2 hours. Reservations are encouraged and can be made
through Ironworld at 800-372-6437. Children must be 10 years of age
or older and accompanied by an adult.
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Hibbing
is recognized as the birthplace of the bus industry in the United
States. Here visitors can see and hear the story at Hibbing's
newest attraction. To start the tour, visitors pass through
a tunnel that comes alive with auto sounds of 1914 and continues
on from the Hupmobile that could not be sold. The story
continues with the men and machines that created Greyhound Bus Lines
told using pictorial displays, hundreds of artifacts and memorabilia,
audio-visual presentation plus a VCR show of "The Greyhound
Story" from Hibbing to everywhere. A diorama of
WW II illustrates how Greyhound contributed to the war effort. Other
exhibits help the visitor understand how, with a Hupmobile car, they
could not sell, and a two mile route, Greyhound grew to be the largest
bus company in the world. The museum also houses eleven
historical buses.
Open Mid-May Thru September;
Monday - Saturday 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. and Sunday 1:00 p.m. -
5:00 p.m. Open on request for special groups in the off season.
Adults $3.00, Students $2.00, Children (6-12) $1.00, Tours $2.00
each. (rates subject to change)
Directions: Exit off Highway 169 in Hibbing onto Howard Street.
Follow Howard Street nine blocks to 3rd Avenue East. Take a right
and follow .7 mile to the Greyhound Bus Museum. For more information
call 1-218-263-5814
or visit
the Greyhound Bus Museum website.
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The
museum, located off US Highway 53 in Eveleth, is a national shrine
of historical significance dedicated to honoring hockey by showcasing
all levels of the sport. Entertaining displays and memorabilia give
visitors an opportunity to experience the thrilling game action and
inspiring achievement of all those involved in the game of hockey.
At the Theatre of Hockey Highlights visitors can re-live the 1980 "Miracle
on Ice," the US historic and exhilarating Olympic victory over
Russia, or watch as the US Women's Gold Medal Winning Hockey Team
takes center stage at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Japan. From the
Great Wall of Fame of Inductees, the Olympic Display, Gallery of
Hockey Art, Mighty Duck Scoreboard, and historic exhibits of famed
hockey memorabilia, this is a must visit for anyone interested in
hockey.
Open year round from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday and
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sunday. Admission is $8 for adults, $7 for seniors
and juniors 13-17, $6 for children 6-12, and under six free but please
note that rates are subject to change. To learn more, visit the U.S.
Hockey Hall of Fame website or call 1-800-443-7825.
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Founded
in 1995, the Vince Shute Wildlife Center is a non-profit
organization whose mission is to promote the well-being of the
black bear and other wildlife through a better understanding. Thousands
of people visit the Vince Shute Wildlife Sanctuary every year,
to view and learn about black bears, their behavior, habitat needs
and life cycles. Visitors also get the opportunity to view a special
group of wild bears - that come to this location every summer -
from an elevated platform.
Nestled in the North Woods of Minnesota, the Sanctuary is located
approximately two hours northwest of Duluth. The nearest town is
Orr, which is about thirty minutes away. Encompassing some 360 acres,
the Sanctuary consists of a combination of habitats: aspen forests,
cedar swamps, marshes, beaver ponds, a primary stream, open areas
and numerous other resources. In addition to being a seasonal
home to a special group of bears, this habitat is also used by such
wildlife as whitetail deer, bald eagles, beavers, minks, pine martens,
fishers, timber wolves, red squirrels, bobcats, lynx, blue jays,
owls, ducks, songbirds, ravens, and a variety of other species. While
black bears are the primary focus, the various habitats of the Sanctuary
are managed in a manner beneficial to the entire ecosystem. The
permanent establishment of the refuge has preserved a unique opportunity
to view and to photograph the intimate world of the normally reclusive
black bear. The Vince Shute Wildlife Sanctuary also provides a most
extraordinary setting for a variety of non-obtrusive scientific studies
and educational programs relating to the diverse natural resources
found within its boundaries.
For more information
visit the Vince
Shute Wildlife Center website or call 1-800-357-9255.
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