See the latest science firsthand in the Grainger Science Hub. Come meet Dan Kaping, Assistant Conservator, and Peter Rosen, ...
Takapsicapi, Peekitahaminki, and Caabnąįkiisik are just a few names of the game played in North America long before French settlers arrived and gave it their own name: “lacrosse.” Lacrosse is the ...
Supported by a three-year grant from the Cyrus Tang Foundation, the Field Museum Connections: AANHPI Stories & the TEAACH Act project seeks to address this gap by partnering with local Asian American, ...
Pre-Registered Illinois field trips are FREE everyday of the week! Free Wednesdays are the perfect opportunity for you to explore our basic admission exhibitions with your family or a group of science ...
The N. W. Harris Learning Collection at the Field Museum allows you to take real specimens and artifacts into your home or classroom. The N. W. Harris Learning Collection at the Field Museum gives ...
Purchase your gift by Friday, December 20, 2024, if you would like to have it electronically delivered in time for Christmas this year! Looking for the perfect present for the explorer in your life?
The Field Museum is committed to protecting your privacy when you visit our Website or use our Website to purchase tickets, make a donation, become a Field Museum Member, sign up to receive our ...
Go deep behind the scenes and far beyond our walls. Dig into our science stories.
Join us for a series of weekly events that change how you see the museum—whether you’ve visited once or dozens of times. Encounter objects from our collection. Tour an exhibition. Find our poet in ...
The internship applicants should be prepared to be in person, not online. Interns are expected to work full-time, Monday through Friday from 8:30am to 4:30pm (unless otherwise arranged with the ...
This section contains a set of tables for the verification of millipede specimens that have been identified to order using the Millipede Identification Key on this website. This section also aids in ...
Explore the concept of race through sculpture. In the early 1930s, the Field Museum commissioned sculptor Malvina Hoffman to create bronze sculptures for an exhibition called The Races of Mankind.