Field Museum of Natural History
ADDRESS: 1400 S Lake Shore Dr
CITY: Chicago
STATE: IL
COUNTRY: USA
POSTCODE: 60605
PHONE 1: 312/922-9410
WEBSITE: www.fieldmuseum.org
Is it any wonder that Steven Spielberg thought the Field Museum of Natural History was a suitable home turf for the intrepid archaeologist and adventurer hero of his Indiana Jones movies? Spread over the museum's 9 acres of floor space are scores of permanent and temporary exhibitions -- some interactive but most requiring the old-fashion skills of observation and imagination. Navigating all the disparate exhibits can be daunting, so start out in the grand Stanley Field Hall, which you enter from the north or south end. Standing proudly at the north side is the largest, most complete
Tyrannosaurus rex fossil ever unearthed. The museum acquired the specimen -- named
Sue for the paleontologist who discovered it in South Dakota in 1990 -- for a cool $8.4 million after a high-stakes bidding war. The real skull is so heavy that a lighter copy had to be mounted on the skeleton; the actual one is on display nearby. Families should head downstairs for the most popular kid-friendly exhibits. Walking through
Inside Ancient Egypt, visitors explore scenes and rituals of everyday life, viewing 23 actual mummies and realistic burial scenes, a living marsh environment and canal works, the ancient royal barge, a religious shrine, and a reproduction of a typical marketplace of the period. Many of the exhibits allow hands-on interaction, and there are special activities for kids, such as making parchment from living papyrus plants. Next to the Egypt exhibit, you'll find
Underground Adventure, a "total immersion environment" populated by giant robotic earwigs, centipedes, wolf spiders, and other subterranean critters. The Disneyesque exhibit is a big hit with kids, but -- annoyingly -- carries an extra admission charge ($7 on top of regular admission). You might be tempted to skip the "peoples of the world" exhibits, but trust me, some are not only mind-opening but also great fun.
Traveling the Pacific, hidden up on the second floor, is definitely worth a stop. Hundreds of artifacts from the museum's oceanic collection re-create scenes of island life in the South Pacific (there's even a full-scale model of a Maori meetinghouse).
Africa, an assemblage of African artifacts and provocative interactive multimedia presentations, takes viewers to Senegal, a Cameroon palace, the wildlife-rich savanna, and on a "virtual" journey aboard a slave ship to the Americas. Native Chicagoans will quickly name two more signature highlights: the taxidermies of
Bushman (a legendary lowland gorilla that made international headlines while at the city's Lincoln Park Zoo) and the
Man-Eating Lions of Tsavo (the pair of male lions that munched nearly 140 British railway workers constructing a bridge in East Africa in 1898; their story is featured in the film
The Ghost and the Darkness). If you've got little kids along (ages 7 and under), don't miss the
Crown Family PlayLab, which is full of hand-on activities, including an art room and a soundproofed space filled with drums and other percussion instruments. The museum books special traveling exhibits (recent blockbusters included shows on King Tut and ancient Pompeii), but be forewarned: The high-profile exhibits are usually crowded and -- again -- have an additional admission charge. A much better deal is a free tour of the museum highlights; tours begin daily at 11am and 2pm. When you're ready to take a break, the Corner Bakery cafe, just off the main hall, serves food a cut above the usual museum food court -- although there's also a McDonald's on the lower level. Allow 3 hours.
Copyright: Excerpted from
Frommer's Chicago 2009, (c) 2008, Wiley Publishing, Inc.

Chicago
, USA