Susan M.
Yelp
This museum building itself is a work of art, all glass and angles and curves, inside and out. I recommend visiting The Place Where You Go to Listen, a surround-sound room on the 3rd floor where sounds of the earth play in real time, from tectonic rumbling vibrations, to the Aurora, and other environmental conditions, creating an eerie organic symphony accompanied by ever-changing light.
30-minute nature/science/educational movies are shown daily ($5 each) in rotation in the Arnold Espe Auditorium. I saw Dynamic Aurora, filmed in 2009, which was did not show as much of the Aurora Borealis itself as I'd hoped, and filming techniques were not as good they are now, so it was somewhat disappointing.
But the second movie, Extreme Weather, a National Geographic film from 2016, was stunning! Incredible footage of Alaskan Glaciers "calving" (splitting apart and falling explosively into the water), wildfires blistering everything in their paths, being fought by brave firefighters, tornadoes barreling their way across the Midwest, with researchers dodging the violent winds while trying to embed measuring instruments, and other weather phenomena. It shows how the destructive forces of weather and nature are tied together.
The first floor Gallery of Alaska captures the breadth and depth of Alaska's history, culture, wildlife, and geography, including a film, letters, photographs and first-person accounts of the inhumane internment of the state's Japanese residents after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. You'll come face-to-face with a black, polar, and grizzly bears, a musk ox, and the world's only mummified steppe bison!
Stop by the Museum Store for everything from smoked salmon to native art and jewelry, to gorgeous Aurora photographs, to pencils that change color from the heat of your hand, to T-shirts!