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Illinois - Nature and Scientific Wonders

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  • By Smithsonian.com
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Unusual rock formations define an area called the Garden of the Gods in the Shawnee National Forest.
Unusual rock formations define an area called the Garden of the Gods in the Shawnee National Forest. (Courtesy of Mike Seroni/Illinois Bureau of Tourism)

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Designed by Frank Gehry, the Bicentennial Plaza Bridge in Chicago is 925 feet long and the only bridge in the world designed by the famed architect.

Illinois

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Designed by Frank Gehry, the Bicentennial Plaza Bridge in Chicago is 925 feet long and the only bridge in the world designed by the famed architect.

View our photo gallery of Illinois

Related Links

  • Official Tourism Web Site

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  • Illinois - Landmarks and Points of Interest
  • Illinois - Cultural Destinations
  • Illinois - Music and Performing Arts
  • Illinois

Chicago’s Field Musem is home to the largest, best preserved and most complete Tyrannosaurus rex ever discovered. Uncovered in South Dakota in 1990 and unveiled at the Field Museum in 2000, "Sue" is 42 feet long from nose to tail.

Not to be outdone, the Burpee Museum of Natural History, in Rockford, is home to a T. rex named "Jane." Found in Montana in 2001, Jane is the most complete adolescent T. Rex on record.

The woods in Starved Rock State Park, near Utica, hide 18 canyons and a series of waterfalls, reached by hiking trails along the Illinois and Michigan Canal National Heritage Corridor. The hills, gorges, streams and lakes were carved by glaciers melting thousands of years ago.


Chicago’s Field Musem is home to the largest, best preserved and most complete Tyrannosaurus rex ever discovered. Uncovered in South Dakota in 1990 and unveiled at the Field Museum in 2000, "Sue" is 42 feet long from nose to tail.

Not to be outdone, the Burpee Museum of Natural History, in Rockford, is home to a T. rex named "Jane." Found in Montana in 2001, Jane is the most complete adolescent T. Rex on record.

The woods in Starved Rock State Park, near Utica, hide 18 canyons and a series of waterfalls, reached by hiking trails along the Illinois and Michigan Canal National Heritage Corridor. The hills, gorges, streams and lakes were carved by glaciers melting thousands of years ago.

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