The Photo Archives has an extensive collection of geological images form the past and the present.
Image slideshow
csgeo3251c4
Photographer(s): Unspecified (c) (c) Unspecified
Media for Field Museum History
Photographer(s): Unspecified (c) (c) Unspecified
Benld Meteorite. Ed McCain near the car that was hit by the meteorite. 1938.Credit Information: Neg. # GEO79617Photographer unknown
Photographer(s): Admin (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Late Ordovician Life diorama 390 million years ago models of: seaweed, coral, brachiopod, clam, snail, cephalopod and trilobite.
Photographer(s): Ron Testa (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Middle Cambrian Life diorama, 500 million years ago. Shown are models of: seaweed, sponges, sea cucumbers, brachiopods, worm, trilobites and crustaceans. Fine grained shale bed from British Columbia.
Photographer(s): Ron Testa (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Mastodon americanus, Kerr skeleton.Credit Information: Neg. # GEO82370Photographer unknown
Photographer(s): Admin (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Eugene Richardson, Curator of Paleontology and Tibor Perenyi, scientific illustrator, creating a model of the Tully Monster, Tullimonstrum gregarium, for exhibitCredit Information:Neg. # GEO82825Photographer: unknown
Photographer(s): Admin (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Meteorite slice.
Photographer(s): Ron Testa (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Carboniferous Forest Diorama or Coal Forest Diorama.
Photographer(s): John Weinstein (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History - CC BY 4.0
Albertosaurus libratus fossil skeleton.Credit Information: Neg. # GEO85827cPhotographer unknown
Photographer(s): Admin (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Albertosaurus, black background, Albertosaurus libratus. Size: 27 ft (8.5m) long, 2.5 tons (2,500kg). Late Cretaceous, 75-85 million years ago.
Photographer(s): John Weinstein (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Soft-shelled turtle. Apalone sp. (with Diplomystus dentatus, Pareodus testis, and Knightia eocaena). Early Eocene (50 million years ago) Fossil Lake, Wyoming.Credit Information:Neg. # GEO85891cPhotographer: unknown
Photographer(s): Admin (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Fossil of a fish eating a fish: Mioplosus labrocoides swallowing a knightia eocaena.
Photographer(s): John Weinstein (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Skeleton of Columbian Mammoth in Teeth Tusks and Tar Pits exhibit. Charles Knight La Brea Tar Pools painting in background.
Photographer(s): John Weinstein (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Sue, Tyrannosaurus rex, five foot long, 2000 pound skull.
Photographer(s): John Weinstein (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Sue, T. rex dinosaur skull, profile, jaws open, 5 feet long.
Photographer(s): John Weinstein (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
External view, 3/4 of Sue, T. rex skull. CT scan made at Boeing Corporation, California. Credit Information: Neg. # GEO86195_3cCT Scan by Chris Brochu
Photographer(s): Admin (c) (c) The Field Museum
Opal Cabochon brooch with carved face of Sun God, gold mounting.
Photographer(s): John Weinstein (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Lepidopteris ottonis (Seed Fern). East Greenland Expedition, 2002. Astartekloft, Hess 89, Bed 4.
Photographer(s): Mark Widhalm (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Sue, T. rex, completed mount of fossil skeleton before unveiling, behind the white curtain / box.
Photographer(s): John Weinstein (c) (c) The Field Museum
Sue, T. rex, completed mount of fossil skeleton before unveiling, behind the white curtain / box.
Photographer(s): John Weinstein (c) (c) The Field Museum
Gorgosaurus libratus, Lambe fossil skeleton in Stanley Field Hall.
Photographer(s): Ron Testa (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Sue, T. rex, fossil skeleton with white background.
Photographer(s): John Weinstein (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Sue T. rex reconstructed cast of skull.
Photographer(s): John Weinstein (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Topazes (smoky topaz), 3 gems shown.
Photographer(s): Ron Testa (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Chalmers Topaz. Flawless faceted white oval with blue cast.
Photographer(s): Ron Testa (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History - CC BY-NC 4.0
Dimetrodon.
Photographer(s): John Weinstein (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Stenopterygius quardiscissus (Quenstedt) (or quadricissus), fossil skeleton of a fish-shaped ichthyosaur with epidermis outline preserved.
Photographer(s): Ron Testa (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History
Tiffany window, mermaid and fish. Viewable in the Granger Hall of Gems on the Museum's upper level.
Photographer(s): Ron Testa (c) (c) Field Museum of Natural History - CC BY-NC 4.0
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