Lab Infrastructure

Overhead shot of a paleontologist sitting at a desk covered in fossils, pens, and supplies, looking into a microscope. Alvaro Keding/© AMNH

A fossil preparation laboratory contains specialized tools, equipment and materials that enable the preparator to complete the exacting tasks required to both expose the fossil and to preserve it for future generations.

The precise make-up of the lab will depend on space, budget, and the number of people working there, but the ideal lab setup will allow for some segregation of the various types of activities involved in fossil preparation along the following lines:

Setting up and outfitting a new lab is estimated to cost at least $20-30,000 but expenses will vary widely depending on the location. Download the floorplans and workstation diagrams from the Chicago Field Museum’s prep labs to see an example layout. 

Below are recommendations on lab infrastructure requirements based on the advice of a number of preparators.  

Lab environment

Massive Haplocanthosaurus leg bones arranged in position on long pieces of wood inside of a laboratory.
Haplocanthosaurus leg bones arranged in position, Vertebrate Paleontology Lab. 
Alex J. Rota/© AMNH

Lab infrastructure

Documentation equipment

Nowadays a computer and digital camera are essential equipment for any preparator, these are necessary to keep effective records of activities performed on each specimen and as well as to communicate with researchers and other preparators. 

Health & safety equipment

Some vendor/source information is given below. This is done solely to provide examples and does not imply endorsement.

These Fossil Preparation resources were originally developed in 2007 with the support of the National Science Foundation (NSF).

National Science Foundation logo is of an illustration of planet earth with a gold border and text that reads NSF.