The 13 Highest-Paying Jobs For People Who Don't Want To Sit At A Desk All Day

Commercial Pilot
These guys have a pretty good gig. liz west/flickr

Sitting in a cubicle all day can be depressing, but the sad truth is that the vast majority of high-paying, stable jobs require people to mostly stay chained to their desk.

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Using average salary data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, we decided to pick out the 13 highest-paying jobs where people get to stop staring at their computer screens and go somewhere else.

Take a look to see the kind of money you can make in a classroom, at a drill site, or in a cockpit 30,000 feet above the earth.

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13. Mining and geological engineer

mining dump truck hauler
Reuters /Siphiwe Sibeko

Average annual pay: $96,950

These are the folks responsible for figuring out what's going on under the surface at mining and land development sites, and making sure things are safe for the environment and for workers.

Though mining is thought to be a dangerous industry, the salary isn't bad.

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12. Industrial production manager

Factory manager
Flickr/St Kitts & Nevis Government

Average annual pay: $99,370

The average factory manager makes just shy of six figures, but it's unclear whether working on a factory floor is much better than in a cubicle.

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11. Economics professor

janet yellen
Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen testifies before a House Financial Services Committee hearing on "Monetary Policy and the State of the Economy." at the Rayburn House Office Building in Washington, February 11, 2014. REUTERS/Mary F. Calvert

Average annual pay: $100,490

There's good money in the (college) classroom, and economics professors are cited everywhere from news stories to policy papers for their decision-making knowledge.

Prior to working for the government, current Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen was an economics professor at the University of California-Berkeley.

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10. Engineering professor

Engineering professor
Flickr/Pop!Tech

Average annual pay: $102,880

This job description includes both professors primarily concerned with teaching and those primarily working in research.

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9. Chemical engineer

Chemical engineer
Flickr/UC Davis College of Engineering

Average annual pay: $104,340

Chemical engineers help create everything from medicine to fuel. Many work in offices, but others have the opportunity to work in laboratories or at the facilities where their science is being used to create new foods or chemicals.

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8. Aerospace engineer

Aerospace engineer
Flickr/Cushing Memorial Library and Archives, Texas A&M

Average annual pay: $105,450

What could be cooler than building airplanes and spaceships?

While many engineers spend a lot of their time in an office, others get to go onsite to oversee the actual construction of the things they're building.

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7. Medical school professor

Medical school professor
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Average annual pay: $105,880 

Teaching doctors, dentists, and veterinarians can make you a nice six-figure salary.

The average salary isn't quite as much as what the average practicing physician makes, but it's certainly nothing to sneeze at.

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6. Geoscientist

Geoscientists
Flickr/HWUPetroleum

Average annual pay: $108,420

Earth scientists study a wide range of natural landscapes and can work in jobs at engineering and environmental consulting firms, mining companies, and government agencies.

Oftentimes this means going on site, whether its helping the Army Corps of Engineers build a bridge or studying the ocean to produce research for a college.

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5. Law professor

Obama Press Briefing
AP

Average annual pay: $122,280

Being a legal professor is a pretty good gig. You get a nice salary and the opportunity to educate the next generation of lawyers and judges.

And who knows, you might just follow in the footsteps of Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, both of whom taught law school before moving on to bigger things.

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4. Airline pilot

airplane pilot
Paul Hackett/Reuters

Average annual pay: $129,600

While you're still in a confined space, at least you're flying around the world.

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3. Petroleum engineer

Petroleum Engineers
Nick L via flickr

 Average annual pay: $149,180

Petroleum engineers come up with the best ways to get oil out of the ground, a valuable skill these days. This profession includes developing the tools and software necessary to get the job done.

Much of the work is done on-site, where the engineers are required to inspect the drilling process and make sure everything is running smoothly.

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2. Nurse anesthetist

Nurse anesteticist
Flickr/isafmedia

 Average annual pay: $157,690

Nurse anesthetists work with doctors to provide anesthesia to patients prior to surgery. In some cases, especially at hospitals in rural areas, the nurse anesthetist is the sole provider of anesthesia at the facility.

The job requires people to be licensed as a registered nurse and obtain a master's degree in nurse anesthesia.

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1. Doctor

nap at work doctors
Joe Raedle/Getty Images

 Average annual pay: $191,880

Physicians and surgeons have meaningful, active work and get paid nicely to do it.

Specialists, like orthodontists and gynecologists, can make even more, with anesthesiologists topping the list with a $235,070 average annual salary.

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