Field Museum
Field Museum
The Field Museum was incorporated in the State of Illinois on September 16, 1893 as the Columbian Museum of Chicago with its purpose the "accumulation and dissemination of knowledge, and the preservation and exhibition of objects illustrating art, archaeology, science and history." In 1905, the Museum's name was changed to Field Museum of Natural History to honor the Museum's first major benefactor, Marshall Field, and to better reflect its focus on the natural sciences.
Geology
In 1921 the Museum moved from its original location in Jackson Park to its present site on Chicago Park District property near downtown where it is part of a lakefront Museum Campus that includes the John G. Shedd Aquarium and the Adler Planetarium. These three institutions are regarded as among the finest of their kind in the world and together attract more visits annually than any comparable site in Chicago.
Sue
Su Lin
the smaller Red Panda
Buddha
Maori carving (New Zealand)
Ethnographic Diorama
More Photos of the Museum Dioramas
Ethnographic items from Papua-New Guinea
a special exhibit
More Photos of the Pompeii exhibit
July 2006
King Tut Exhibit