By what metric are these fields measured? If you go into engineering because your family told you to, scrape by with a C+, and get into a garbage tier low paying job that you hate so much that you dread waking up in the morning, it isn't god tier.
If you love history and making new discoveries, field expeditions and pouring over stats and artifacts, and you are passionate about unlocking the past (and you don't have Indiana Jones misconceptions about the field), archeology could be a god tire career for you.
Perhaps someone loves playing the piano, loves classical music, and it is their passion and life's goal to lead an orchestra one day. While they recognise the need for money in our S O C I E T Y, they don't obsess over it. For them, would music not be a high career choice?
Whoever made that pic, and anyone that unironically bases careers objectively like that, either ignores or doesn't understand that there is a whole world out there full of people who have different interests. To that person, the thought of sitting at a desk making papers or drafting designs is enough to give them a cold sweat, but to another man, that career is his dream.
So to answer OP's question, the pic is accurate only to a specific group of people (aka everyone on this board). But to many other people, it is wholly inaccurate.