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  • A lifelike animatronic of a Tyrannosaurus rex, a three quarter size version of Sue, the Field Museum’s famous T-rex, will roar and their heads will follow visitors along with a Triceratops and the dreaded Velociraptors. <br />
Photography by Jose More
    T-Rex_Animatronics_008.JPG
  • A lifelike animatronic of a Tyrannosaurus rex, a three quarter size version of Sue, the Field Museum’s famous T-rex, will roar and their heads will follow visitors along with a Triceratops and the dreaded Velociraptors. <br />
Photography by Jose More
    T-Rex_Animatronics_004.JPG
  • A lifelike animatronic of a Tyrannosaurus rex, a three quarter size version of Sue, the Field Museum’s famous T-rex, will roar and their heads will follow visitors along with a Triceratops and the dreaded Velociraptors. <br />
Photography by Jose More
    T-Rex_Animatronics_009.JPG
  • A lifelike animatronic of a Tyrannosaurus rex, a three quarter size version of Sue, the Field Museum’s famous T-rex, will roar and their heads will follow visitors along with a Triceratops and the dreaded Velociraptors. <br />
Photography by Jose More
    T-Rex_Animatronics_001.JPG
  • A lifelike animatronic of a Tyrannosaurus rex, a three quarter size version of Sue, the Field Museum’s famous T-rex, will roar and their heads will follow visitors along with a Triceratops and the dreaded Velociraptors. <br />
Photography by Jose More
    T-Rex_Animatronics_002.JPG
  • A lifelike animatronic of a Tyrannosaurus rex, a three quarter size version of Sue, the Field Museum’s famous T-rex, will roar and their heads will follow visitors along with a Triceratops and the dreaded Velociraptors. <br />
Photography by Jose More
    T-Rex_Animatronics_010.JPG
  • A lifelike animatronic of a Tyrannosaurus rex, a three quarter size version of Sue, the Field Museum’s famous T-rex, will roar and their heads will follow visitors along with a Triceratops and the dreaded Velociraptors. <br />
Photography by Jose More
    T-Rex_Animatronics_005.JPG
  • A lifelike animatronic of a Tyrannosaurus rex, a three quarter size version of Sue, the Field Museum’s famous T-rex, will roar and their heads will follow visitors along with a Triceratops and the dreaded Velociraptors. <br />
Photography by Jose More
    T-Rex_Animatronics_013.JPG
  • A lifelike animatronic of a Tyrannosaurus rex, a three quarter size version of Sue, the Field Museum’s famous T-rex, will roar and their heads will follow visitors along with a Triceratops and the dreaded Velociraptors. <br />
Photography by Jose More
    T-Rex_Animatronics_003.JPG
  • A lifelike animatronic of a Tyrannosaurus rex, a three quarter size version of Sue, the Field Museum’s famous T-rex, will roar and their heads will follow visitors along with a Triceratops and the dreaded Velociraptors. <br />
Photography by Jose More
    T-Rex_Animatronics_011.JPG
  • A lifelike animatronic of a Tyrannosaurus rex, a three quarter size version of Sue, the Field Museum’s famous T-rex, will roar and their heads will follow visitors along with a Triceratops and the dreaded Velociraptors. <br />
Photography by Jose More
    T-Rex_Animatronics_007.JPG
  • A lifelike animatronic of a Tyrannosaurus rex, a three quarter size version of Sue, the Field Museum’s famous T-rex, will roar and their heads will follow visitors along with a Triceratops and the dreaded Velociraptors. <br />
Photography by Jose More
    T-Rex_Animatronics_006.JPG
  • Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History is the home to SUE, a 67-million year-old Tyrannosaurus rex fossil discovered in 1990 by paleontologist Sue Hendrickson near Faith, South Dakota. It was purchased by the Field Museum at an auction in 1997 for $8.4 million. It took 30,000 hours to prepare the more than 250 bones and teeth in her skeleton.<br />
Photography by Jose More
    Field_Museum_Sue_00023.JPG
  • Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History is the home to SUE, a 67-million year-old Tyrannosaurus rex fossil discovered in 1990 by paleontologist Sue Hendrickson near Faith, South Dakota. It was purchased by the Field Museum at an auction in 1997 for $8.4 million. It took 30,000 hours to prepare the more than 250 bones and teeth in her skeleton.<br />
Photography by Jose More
    Field_Museum_Sue_00022.JPG
  • Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History is the home to SUE, a 67-million year-old Tyrannosaurus rex fossil discovered in 1990 by paleontologist Sue Hendrickson near Faith, South Dakota. It was purchased by the Field Museum at an auction in 1997 for $8.4 million. It took 30,000 hours to prepare the more than 250 bones and teeth in her skeleton.<br />
Photography by Jose More
    Field_Museum_Sue_00020.JPG
  • Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History is the home to SUE, a 67-million year-old Tyrannosaurus rex fossil discovered in 1990 by paleontologist Sue Hendrickson near Faith, South Dakota. It was purchased by the Field Museum at an auction in 1997 for $8.4 million. It took 30,000 hours to prepare the more than 250 bones and teeth in her skeleton.<br />
Photography by Jose More
    Field_Museum_Sue_00019.JPG
  • Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History is the home to SUE, a 67-million year-old Tyrannosaurus rex fossil discovered in 1990 by paleontologist Sue Hendrickson near Faith, South Dakota. It was purchased by the Field Museum at an auction in 1997 for $8.4 million. It took 30,000 hours to prepare the more than 250 bones and teeth in her skeleton.<br />
Photography by Jose More
    Field_Museum_Sue_00025.JPG
  • Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History is the home to SUE, a 67-million year-old Tyrannosaurus rex fossil discovered in 1990 by paleontologist Sue Hendrickson near Faith, South Dakota. It was purchased by the Field Museum at an auction in 1997 for $8.4 million. It took 30,000 hours to prepare the more than 250 bones and teeth in her skeleton.<br />
Photography by Jose More
    Field_Museum_Sue_00016.JPG
  • Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History is the home to SUE, a 67-million year-old Tyrannosaurus rex fossil discovered in 1990 by paleontologist Sue Hendrickson near Faith, South Dakota. It was purchased by the Field Museum at an auction in 1997 for $8.4 million. It took 30,000 hours to prepare the more than 250 bones and teeth in her skeleton.<br />
Photography by Jose More
    Field_Museum_Sue_00024.JPG
  • Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History is the home to SUE, a 67-million year-old Tyrannosaurus rex fossil discovered in 1990 by paleontologist Sue Hendrickson near Faith, South Dakota. It was purchased by the Field Museum at an auction in 1997 for $8.4 million. It took 30,000 hours to prepare the more than 250 bones and teeth in her skeleton.<br />
Photography by Jose More
    Field_Museum_Sue_00018.JPG
  • Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History is the home to SUE, a 67-million year-old Tyrannosaurus rex fossil discovered in 1990 by paleontologist Sue Hendrickson near Faith, South Dakota. It was purchased by the Field Museum at an auction in 1997 for $8.4 million. It took 30,000 hours to prepare the more than 250 bones and teeth in her skeleton.<br />
Photography by Jose More
    Field_Museum_Sue_00017.JPG
  • Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History is the home to SUE, a 67-million year-old Tyrannosaurus rex fossil discovered in 1990 by paleontologist Sue Hendrickson near Faith, South Dakota. It was purchased by the Field Museum at an auction in 1997 for $8.4 million. It took 30,000 hours to prepare the more than 250 bones and teeth in her skeleton.<br />
Photography by Jose More
    Field_Museum_Sue_00026.JPG
  • Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History is the home to SUE, a 67-million year-old Tyrannosaurus rex fossil discovered in 1990 by paleontologist Sue Hendrickson near Faith, South Dakota. It was purchased by the Field Museum at an auction in 1997 for $8.4 million. It took 30,000 hours to prepare the more than 250 bones and teeth in her skeleton.<br />
Photography by Jose More
    Field_Museum_Sue_00021.JPG
  • Mathew Fisher of Kumotek Robotics sits between two lifelike animatronics the dreaded Velociraptors.  <br />
 Photography by Jose More
    T-Rex_Animatronics_012.JPG
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