Last week I got a chance to visit the Field Museum in
Chicago for the first time! It's a great big museum with lots of cool stuff, so
I figured I'd share a few impressions from my lunchtime jaunts through the
exhibits. Let's get started with all the fossil exhibits outside of the main fossil hall (there are several, but some of them are kind of hidden away!).
SUE
Sue the Tyrannosaurus is most definitely not hidden away, and occupies a place of pride in the museum's main entrance hall. Sue is undeniably a great fossil, although I (and I suspect probably some other palaeontologists as well) have mixed feelings about this fossil: it's incredibly well preserved, but the intense backstory to Sue's acquisition is filled with several unpleasant twists and turns. I'm glad Sue found a home in a museum, but I wish it hadn't been placed up for auction - Sue's auctioning may not have directly led to the trend of putting dinosaurs up for auction for millions of dollars, but I feel like it set a bad precedent all the same.
One thing that's particularly enjoyable about this specific Tyrannosaurus skeleton are the abundant pathologies to be found. Sue has a busted/infected shin, holes in its jaw, and rough bumpy spots on its vertebrae. These vertebrae near the end of the tail have a big mass of crinkly bone around them. It's obvious Sue got up to some trouble during its life, and it's interesting to speculate on the causes of the various oddities in the skeleton (and indeed, others have!).
Extinct Madagascar
Sadly, this exhibit is tucked so far out of the way that basically nobody had wandered back there besides me (you need to go through the conservation gallery to reach it). It's also a little bit specimen-sparse, a trend I've noticed recently in many museums and which I find somewhat concerning. However, I feel like it makes up for the lack of 3D objects in its cool and unusual subject matter - the extinct fauna of Madagascar. The main point to the gallery was showcasing the social media response to new images of Madagascar's prehistory, and the scientific process that went into those images. It was an interesting way to approach the topic, but might have been more compelling with video, audio, or more fossils.
It was pretty cool to see an Aepyornis (elephant bird) egg and life-size silhouette. They really were terrifyingly large and strange birds.
A highlight for me was this Palaeopropithecus skeleton - a lemur that lived and looked like a sloth.
Tracking the Reptiles of Pangea
Tucked away in the African mammals area was a room devoted to palaeontological fieldwork in Tanzania, featuring the newly described silesaurid Asilisaurus! This isn't a skeleton you're going to see in most museums - I only wish more people had been stepping into this little exhibit room to check it out.
A nice touch was showing the original fossil material in its cabinet-ready storage foam. Those are some nice fossils.
And one last fossil....
Seriously, how were these machines not in constant use? They're in the hallway leading towards the bottom-floor cafeteria, and you can get yourself a freshly-made retro Triceratops, Brontosaurus, Tyrannosaurus, or Stegosaurus. I made a Brontosaurus and consider it $2 extremely well spent, especially since it meant I got rid of a bunch of dimes and nickels I didn't know what to do with:
Next time: Evolving Planet!
What! Now I really have to get myself over to the Field Museum. That machine looks like the exact same one Sinclair used at its Dinoland exhibit at the '64 World's Fair! (It may be slightly re-jiggered. Not that I was alive to see it then, mind you...)
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/CZTdkl_jrCw?t=12m24s
It may not be the exact machine, but it is definitely making the same kinds of dinosaurs that were at the 64 World's Fair! This is a cool article about the history of Mold-A-Rama: http://mentalfloss.com/article/55241/brief-history-mold-rama
DeleteI LOVE the Field Museum! :-) I did see the Asilisaurus, when I was there last month!
ReplyDeletehttp://ineedorange.blogspot.com/2015/08/august-12-inside-field-museum.html
The Field Museum had those vacuum-plastic dino makers when I was a kid (late 50s or early 60s). I still have my stegosaurus from back then. When I visited Chicago in 2006, I got another stego. It stands on a shelf next to the one from my childhood -- and the odd thing is that though one is golden brown and the other is orange, they are otherwise identical in every way except that the newer one is smaller! Every bump, wrinkle, and plate is the same, only smaller.....
Great blog post! There was so much to see at the museum, I'm really only scratching the surface here!
DeleteI also had a Mold-A-Rama (or related company) dinosaur from when I was younger - a grey Stegosaurus that I got from a science museum in Florida. Still have it, and still think it's awesome.
Thanks. :-) Yes -- SO much to see -- I spent two afternoons there (until overload!), and still didn't begin to even stroll by everything, let alone actually give it some serious attention.
DeleteI bet your stegosaurus is exactly the same as mine, given that my two (different size!) ones are the same............. :-)
I want a moldorama! Totally didn't think those existed anymore. The AMNH has plenty of pressed penny machines but nothing like that!
ReplyDeleteI bet they had one, back in the day. As I recall it, the moldoramas were right there beside the squashed-penny machines. I remember seeing a bust of Abraham Lincoln, and a locomotive engine, somewhere....
DeleteI was thrilled when I discovered the Field Museum still had a moldorama that would make me a stegosaurus, 9 years ago, and pleased to see them last month, too, though I didn't use one this time.