Find a digital background for every day of the week.

Call into your video meeting from the Grand Canyon—or from the jaws of an Allosaurus. Download a free digital background from the American Museum of Natural History and start your video call adventures today.

Coyote Diorama

Fun Fact: Western coyotes, like these pictured in California’s Yosemite National Park, are smaller than eastern coyotes, some of which are descended from coyotes that mated with wolves in the Great Lakes region. These “coy-wolves” have more variety in coat color and, thanks to their extra large size, can hunt deer.

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Oyster Bay Diorama

Fun Fact: Did you know that you can spot more than 50 species of birds in this diorama, which depicts the bird sanctuary near President Theodore Roosevelt’s home, Sagamore Hill, in Cove Neck, New York? Many of these birds can also be spotted in Central Park on a spring day, from wood warblers to larger, more colorful songbirds such as the Scarlet Tanager and the Rose-breasted Grosbeak.

Download a high-res image of the bird sanctuary to use for your background! Also sized for cellphones.

Convection Model

Fun Fact: Deep beneath our feet is a 2,900-kilometer-thick (1,800-mile) layer of mostly solid rock called the mantle, which flows slowly due to convection. Hotter rocks, which have relatively low densities, rise, while cooler rocks with higher densities sink.

Download a high-res image of the Convection Model to use for your background! Also sized for cellphones.

Hayden Planetarium

Fun Fact: The Space Theater is located in the upper half of the Hayden Sphere, an 87-foot diameter sphere that appears to float inside the glass cube that is home to the Museum's Rose Center for Earth and Space.

Download a high-res image of the Hayden Planetarium to use for your background! Also sized for cellphones.

Mountain Lion Diorama

Fun Fact: Grand Canyon National Park offers ideal habitat for cougars, also called mountain lions: shade to escape the heat, rugged terrain in which to ambush prey, and nooks to eat carcasses in private.

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Allosaurus Skull

Fun Fact: This large North American theropod had three claws—which led Museum preparators who were working on the first-ever mount of Tyrannosaurus rex in 1915 to exhibit T. rex with three claws, too.

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Blue Whale Model

Fun Fact: Blue whales make sounds that travel through the ocean for hundreds of miles—but at frequencies far below the range of human hearing.

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Amethyst Geode

Fun Fact: The quartz crystals in this geode probably grew quite quickly, over just a few months or years—but it took millions of years for the crystals to turn from colorless quartz to purple amethyst.

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Polar Bear Diorama

Fun Fact: Polar bears can be very patient—waiting, sometimes for hours, at a breathing hole in the ice. When a seal finally pops up for air, dinner is served!

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Spectrum of Life

Fun Fact: This 100-foot-long exhibit is packed with organisms of all shapes and sizes, representing 1,500 living things—and the great diversity of life on Earth. One no-show? A species with an outsized impact on our planet: humans.

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Giant Squid and Sperm Whale Diorama

Fun Fact: Did you know the Museum has a giant squid specimen in its collection? It came to New York from New Zealand, where it was accidentally snared in a commercial fishing net. Find out about its voyage.

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Tyrannosaurus rex

Fun Fact: Specimen AMNH 5027 was discovered as a nearly complete skeleton at Big Dry Creek, Montana, by famous fossil hunter Barnum Brown. It went on to inspire Hollywood and pop culture, including the book jacket and movie logo for Jurassic Park.

Download a high-res image of T. rex to use for your background!