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  • Los Colorados formation in Argentina.
    Argentina 0001 Los Colorado.jpg
  • Jose Bonaparte investigates a field of dinosaur egg shell in Patagonia, Argentina.
    Dino Egg Shell Argentina Ri.jpg
  • Jose Bonaparte investigates a field of dinosaur egg shell in Patagonia, Argentina.
    Dino Egg Shell Argentina Ri-2.jpg
  • Bonaparte (right) scrambles a four-liter egg discovered by the author in Patagonia, Argentina.  Raul Vacca is on the left.
    scf4373-171+Dino Eggs Bonarpart Arge...jpg
  • Bonaparte (right) scrambles a four-liter egg discovered by the author in Patagonia, Argentina.  Raul Vacca is on the left.
    Dino Eggs Bonarpart Argent.jpg
  • Paleontologist Jose Bonaparte at Cretaceous Site in Argentina.
    Bonaparte Jose 0007 Cret S.jpg
  • The Sereno expedition drives through Ischigualasto, a dinosaur Garden of Eden in the Triassic.  This area, called "Valley of the Moon"  is known to have fossils from a slice of time marking the advent of the earliest dinoaurs.
    scf4327-154_Herrerasaur Skull Sereno...jpg
  • The Sereno expedition drives through Ischigualasto, a dinosaur Garden of Eden in the Triassic.  This area, called "Valley of the Moon"  is known to have fossils from a slice of time marking the advent of the earliest dinoaurs.
    Sereno Expd Ischigual 1b.jpg
  • The Sereno expedition drives through Ischigualasto, a dinosaur Garden of Eden in the Triassic.  This area, called "Valley of the Moon"  is known to have fossils from a slice of time marking the advent of the earliest dinoaurs.
    scf4327-154-herrerasaur skull sereno...jpg
  • The Sereno expedition drives through Ischigualasto, a dinosaur Garden of Eden in the Triassic.  This area, called "Valley of the Moon"  is known to have fossils from a slice of time marking the advent of the earliest dinoaurs.
    Herrerasaur Skull Serenos 3.jpg
  • The Sereno expedition drives through Ischigualasto, a dinosaur Garden of Eden in the Triassic.  This area, called "Valley of the Moon"  is known to have fossils from a slice of time marking the advent of the earliest dinoaurs.
    scf4373-368_Sereno Expd Ischigual 1b.jpg
  • Jose Bonaparte with Amargasaurus, a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.  Discoverer was Guillermo Rougier.
    scf4399-034_Amargasaurus 0003 Jose B...jpg
  • Jose Bonaparte with Carnotaurus the "meat-eating bull," predator from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.
    scf4327-397_Bonaparte Jose 0003a Car...jpg
  • High in the Andes on an ancient nearly vertically faulted shoreline turned to stone geologist Ricardo Alonso of Salta, Argentina, measures the stride of a Cretaceous carnivorous dinosaur with a two-meter stick.
    scf4399-070_Dinosaur Tracks Andes 00...jpg
  • High in the Andes on an ancient nearly vertically faulted shoreline turned to stone geologist Ricardo Alonso of Salta, Argentina, measures the stride of a Cretaceous carnivorous dinosaur with a two-meter stick.
    Dinosaur Tracks 0022 Andes.jpg
  • Amargasaurus, a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires was discovered by paleontologist, Guillermo Rougier.
    Amargasaurus 0008 Discovere.jpg
  • At the Museum of La Plata University in Argentina, paleontologist Fernando E. Novas stands next to a femur of Antarctosaurus, a giant titanosaur sauropod of the Late Cretaceous which may have weighed up to fifty tons.
    scf4399-039_Argentinasaurus femurlig...jpg
  • Jose Bonaparte with Carnotaurus the "meat-eating bull," predator from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.
    scf4327-396bonaparte jose 0003 carno...jpg
  • At the Museum of La Plata University in Argentina, paleontologist Fernando E. Novas stands next to a femur of Antarctosaurus, a giant titanosaur sauropod of the Late Cretaceous which may have weighed up to fifty tons.
    Argentinasaurus femurlight.jpg
  • High in the Andes on an ancient nearly vertically faulted shoreline turned to stone geologist Ricardo Alonso of Salta, Argentina, measures the stride of a Cretaceous carnivorous dinosaur with a two-meter stick.
    scf4327-118-dinosaur tracks andes 00...jpg
  • High in the Andes on an ancient nearly vertically faulted shoreline turned to stone geologist Ricardo Alonso of Salta, Argentina, measures the stride of a Cretaceous carnivorous dinosaur with a two-meter stick.
    scf4327-117-dinosaur tracks 0022 and...jpg
  • High in the Andes on an ancient nearly vertically faulted shoreline turned to stone geologist Ricardo Alonso of Salta, Argentina, measures the stride of a Cretaceous carnivorous dinosaur with a two-meter stick.
    Dinosaur Tracks Andes 0004.jpg
  • High in the Andes on an ancient nearly vertically faulted shoreline turned to stone geologist Ricardo Alonso of Salta, Argentina, measures the stride of a Cretaceous carnivorous dinosaur with a two-meter stick.
    Dinosaur Tracks Andes 0003.jpg
  • High in the Andes on an ancient nearly vertically faulted shoreline turned to stone geologist Ricardo Alonso of Salta, Argentina, measures the stride of a Cretaceous carnivorous dinosaur with a two-meter stick.
    Dinosaur Tracks 0021 Andes.jpg
  • Bonaparte (right) scrambles a four-liter egg discovered by the author in Patagonia, Argentina.  Raul Vacca is on the left.
    Bonaparte Jose 0004 Dinoegg.jpg
  • Jose Bonaparte with Carnotaurus (left) and Amargasaurus (right), a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.
    Bonaparte Jose 0008.tif_.jpg
  • Amargasaurus, a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires was discovered by paleontologist, Guillermo Rougier.
    Amargasaurus 0007 Discovere.jpg
  • Paleontologist prepares, Carnotaurus (left) and Amargasaurus (right), a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.
    Amargasaurus 0005 preparatr.jpg
  • Discoverer of Amargasaurus, Guillermo Rougier, a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.
    Amargasaurus 0004 Rougier.jpg
  • Jose Bonaparte with Amargasaurus, a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.  Discoverer was Guillermo Rougier.
    Amargasaurus 0003 Jose Bo.jpg
  • Jose Bonaparte with Amargasaurus, a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.  Discoverer was Guillermo Rougier, left.
    Amargasaurus 0002 Jose Bo.jpg
  • Jose Bonaparte with Carnotaurus the "meat-eating bull," predator from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.
    Bonaparte Jose 0002 Carnota.jpg
  • Paleontologist prepares Carnotaurus (left) and Amargasaurus (right), a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.
    scf4399-035_Amargasaurus 0006 prepar...jpg
  • Jose Bonaparte with Carnotaurus the "meat-eating bull," predator from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.
    scf4327-397bonaparte jose 0003a carn...jpg
  • Amargasaurus, a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires was discovered by paleontologist, Guillermo Rougier.
    scf4373-048_Amargasaurus 0007 Discov...jpg
  • High in the Andes on an ancient nearly vertically faulted shoreline turned to stone geologist Ricardo Alonso of Salta, Argentina, measures the stride of a Cretaceous carnivorous dinosaur with a two-meter stick.
    scf4327-119-dinosaur tracks andes 00...jpg
  • The Sereno expedition drives through the Los Colorados Formation in Patagonia, near Valley of the Moon, Argentina, in search of the earliest dinosaurs.
    Sereno Expedition 0001.jpg
  • Assistant John Knoebber and I traveled with 42 cases of checked luggage and six carry-ons for most of a year-and-a half-long assignment on dinosaurs for National Geographic Magazine.  This picture was shot in Argentina.
    Psihoyos Luggage 0001.jpg
  • Bonaparte (right) scrambles a four-liter egg discovered by the author in Patagonia, Argentina.  Raul Vacca is on the left.
    Bonaparte Jose 0004a Dinoeg.jpg
  • Paleontologist prepares Carnotaurus (left) and Amargasaurus (right), a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.
    Amargasaurus 0006 preparatr.jpg
  • Jose Bonaparte with Carnotaurus the "meat-eating bull," predator from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.
    Amargasaurus 0001 Jose Bo.jpg
  • At the Museum of La Plata University in Argentina, paleontologist Fernando E. Novas stands next to a femur of Antarctosaurus, a giant titanosaur sauropod of the Late Cretaceous which may have weighed up to fifty tons.
    Argentinasaurus femur 1.jpg
  • The Sereno expedition drives through Ischigualasto, a dinosaur Garden of Eden in the Triassic.  This area, called "Valley of the Moon"  is known to have fossils from a slice of time marking the advent of the earliest dinoaurs.
    scf4327-211-sereno paul 0001.jpg
  • Dinosaur Eggs Discovered by Family in Lamarque, Argentiana
    scf4327-080_Dino Egg 0020 Patagonia.jpg
  • Dinosaur Eggs Discovered by Family in Lamarque, Argentiana
    Dino Egg 0021 Patagonia.jpg
  • At the Municipal Museum in Plaza Huincul, Rodolfo Coria, the leading paleontologist in the province of Neuquen prepares the vertebrae of an unnamed sauropod, the largest ever found from the Cretaceous.
    scf4399-056_Coria Rodolfo.jpg
  • One of the strange mutations that developed when South America split off from the other continents for 65 million years was Carnotaurus, the "meat-eating bull," a predator that grew horns on its head.  Circa 1993
    scf4327-053-carnotaurus 0003 bonapar...jpg
  • One of the strange mutations that developed when South America split off from the other continents for 65 million years was Carnotaurus, the "meat-eating bull," a predator that grew horns on its head.  Circa 1992
    scf4327-052-carnotaurus 0002 bonapar...jpg
  • At the Municipal Museum in Plaza Huincul, Rodolfo Coria, the leading paleontologist in the province of Neuquen, and Raul Vacca prepare the vertebrae of an unnamed sauropod, the largest ever found from the Cretaceous.
    Coria Rodolfo Raul Vacca P.jpg
  • One of the strange mutations that developed when South America split off from the other continents for 65 million years was Carnotaurus, the "meat-eating bull," a predator that grew horns on its head.  Circa 1993
    Carnotaurus 0003 Bonaparte.jpg
  • One of the strange mutations that developed when South America split off from the other continents for 65 million years was Carnotaurus, the "meat-eating bull," a predator that grew horns on its head.  Circa 1992
    Carnotaurus 0002 Bonaparte.jpg
  • Paul Sereno holds the skull of a Herrerasaur found in the "Valley of the Moon" an area of Patagonia known to have fossils from a slice of time marking the advent of the earliest dinoaurs.
    scf4327-153-herrerasaur skull sereno...jpg
  • Dinosaur Eggs Discovered by Family in Lamarque, Argentiana
    scf4327-081-dino egg 0021 patagonia.jpg
  • Dinosaur Eggs Discovered by Family in Lamarque, Argentiana
    scf4327-080-dino egg 0020 patagonia.jpg
  • Dinosaur Eggs Discovered by Family in Lamarque, Argentiana
    scf4327-094_Dino Egg in Lamarque 000...jpg
  • The Sereno expedition drives through Ischigualasto, a dinosaur Garden of Eden in the Triassic.  This area, called "Valley of the Moon"  is known to have fossils from a slice of time marking the advent of the earliest dinoaurs.
    Sereno Expedition Ishigual.jpg
  • Paul Sereno holds the skull of a Herrerasaur found in the "Valley of the Moon" an area of Patagonia known to have fossils from a slice of time marking the advent of the earliest dinoaurs.
    Herrerasaur Skull Serenos 4.jpg
  • Dinosaur Eggs Discovered by Family in Lamarque, Argentiana
    Dino Egg in Lamarque 0001.jpg
  • This bowling ball sized Chinese dinosaur egg, found by a farmer from Patagonia, could have held nearly a gallon of yolk, enough for several dozen omelettes.
    Dino Egg Rooster 0002.jpg
  • Dinosaur Eggs Discovered by Family in Lamarque, Argentiana
    Dino Egg 0022 Patagonia.jpg
  • Jose Bonaparte with Amargasaurus, a "jibbed" sauropod in the kitchen of the paleontology department of the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.
    Bonaparte Jose 0005 Amargas.jpg
  • One of the strange mutations that developed when South America split off from the other continents for 65 million years was Carnotaurus, the "meat-eating bull," a predator that grew horns on its head.  Circa 1992
    scf4327-052_Carnotaurus 0002 Bonapar...jpg
  • At the Municipal Museum in Plaza Huincul, Rodolfo Coria, the leading paleontologist in the province of Neuquen prepares the vertebrae of an unnamed sauropod, the largest ever found from the Cretaceous.
    Coria Rodolfo.jpg
  • One of the strange mutations that developed when South America split off from the other continents for 65 million years was Carnotaurus, the "meat-eating bull," a predator that grew horns on its head.  Circa 1993
    Carnotaurus 0001 Bonaparte.jpg
  • Paul Sereno holds the skull of a Herrerasaur found in the "Valley of the Moon" an area of Patagonia known to have fossils from a slice of time marking the advent of the earliest dinoaurs.
    scf4327-153_Herrerasaur Skull Sereno...jpg
  • Dinosaur Eggs Discovered by Family in Lamarque, Argentiana
    scf4327-094-dino egg in lamarque 000...jpg
  • The Sereno expedition drives through Ischigualasto, a dinosaur Garden of Eden in the Triassic.  This area, called "Valley of the Moon"  is known to have fossils from a slice of time marking the advent of the earliest dinoaurs.
    Sereno Paul 0001.jpg
  • The Sereno expedition drives through Ischigualasto, a dinosaur Garden of Eden in the Triassic.  This area, called "Valley of the Moon"  is known to have fossils from a slice of time marking the advent of the earliest dinoaurs.
    Sereno Ischigualasto.jpg
  • Paul Sereno holds the skull of a Herrerasaur found in the "Valley of the Moon" an area of Patagonia known to have fossils from a slice of time marking the advent of the earliest dinoaurs.
    Herrerasaur Skull Serenos 2.jpg
  • Dinosaur Eggs Discovered by Family in Lamarque, Argentiana
    Dino Egg in Lamarque 0002.jpg
  • Ankylosaur Tooth from Baby
    Dino Egg Embryo Tooth.jpg
  • Dinosaur Eggs Discovered by Family in Lamarque, Argentiana
    Dino Egg 0020 Patagonia.jpg
  • Jose Bonaparte walks on Egg Shells.
    Bonaparte Jose 0006 DinoEgg.jpg
  • Dinosaur Eggs Discovered by Family in Lamarque, Argentiana
    scf4327-082_Dino Egg 0022 Patagonia.jpg
  • Dinosaur Eggs Discovered by Family in Lamarque, Argentiana
    scf4327-082-dino egg 0022 patagonia.jpg
  • Paul Sereno holds the skull of a Herrerasaur found in the "Valley of the Moon" an area of Patagonia known to have fossils from a slice of time marking the advent of the earliest dinoaurs.
    Herrerasaur Skull Serenos 1.jpg
  • A nest of Mussaurus "mouse lizards" prosauropods of the Late Triassic and some of the smallest dinosaur specimens ever found were discovered by preparator Martin Vince of the U. of Tucuman in Argentina.
    Mussaurus Argentina 0002.jpg
  • A nest of Mussaurus "mouse lizards" prosauropods of the Late Triassic and some of the smallest dinosaur specimens ever found were discovered by preparator Martin Vince of the U. of Tucuman in Argentina.
    Mussaurus Argentina 0001.jpg
  • A nest of Mussaurus "mouse lizards" prosauropods of the Late Triassic and some of the smallest dinosaur specimens ever found were discovered in a nest by preparator Martin Vince of the U. of Tucuman in Argentina.
    Mussaurus 0004 Skull.jpg
  • A nest of Mussaurus "mouse lizards" prosauropods of the Late Triassic and some of the smallest dinosaur specimens ever found were discovered in a nest by preparator Martin Vince of the U. of Tucuman in Argentina.
    scf4399-091_Mussaurus 0003 Argentian.jpg
  • A nest of Mussaurus "mouse lizards" prosauropods of the Late Triassic and some of the smallest dinosaur specimens ever found were discovered in a nest by preparator Martin Vince of the U. of Tucuman in Argentina.
    Mussaurus 0003 Argentian.jpg
  • Stephen Czerkas sculpted this Carnotaurus, now in the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.  At the Carnotaurus ("meat-eating bull") excavation site in Argentina they discovered huge patches of fossilized skin impressions.
    scf4399-050_Carnotaurus Czerkas 0001.jpg
  • Stephen Czerkas sculpted this Carnotaurus, now in the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.  At the Carnotaurus ("meat-eating bull") excavation site in Argentina they discovered huge patches of fossilized skin impressions.
    Carnotaurus Czerkas 0003.jpg
  • Stephen Czerkas sculpted this Carnotaurus, now in the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.  At the Carnotaurus ("meat-eating bull") excavation site in Argentina they discovered huge patches of fossilized skin impressions.
    Carnotaurus Czerkas 0001.jpg
  • Stephen Czerkas sculpted this Carnotaurus, now in the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.  At the Carnotaurus ("meat-eating bull") excavation site in Argentina they discovered huge patches of fossilized skin impressions.
    scf4327-054-carnotaurus czerkas 0001.jpg
  • Stephen Czerkas sculpted this Carnotaurus, now in the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.  At the Carnotaurus ("meat-eating bull") excavation site in Argentina they discovered huge patches of fossilized skin impressions.
    Carnotaurus Czerkas 0002.jpg
  • This bowling ball-sized Argentinian dinosaur egg could have held nearly a gallon of yolk, enough for several dozen omelettes.
    scf4327-088_Dino Egg Bowling Ball 00...jpg
  • This bowling ball-sized Argentian dinosaur egg could have held nearly a gallon of yolk, enough for several dozen omelettes.
    scf4373-155_Dino Egg Bowling Ball 00...jpg
  • This bowling ball-sized Argentinian dinosaur egg could have held nearly a gallon of yolk, enough for several dozen omelettes.
    Dino Egg Bowling Ball 0002.jpg
  • This bowling ball-sized Argentinian dinosaur egg could have held nearly a gallon of yolk, enough for several dozen omelettes.
    scf4327-088-dino egg bowling ball 00...jpg
  • This bowling ball-sized Argentian dinosaur egg could have held nearly a gallon of yolk, enough for several dozen omelettes.
    scf4327-087-dino egg bowling ball 00...jpg
  • This bowling ball-sized Argentian dinosaur egg could have held nearly a gallon of yolk, enough for several dozen omelettes.
    Dino Egg Bowling Ball 0001.jpg
  • This bowling ball sized Chinese dinosaur egg, found by a farmer from Patagonia, could have held nearly a gallon of yolk, enough for several dozen omelettes.
    Dino Egg Rooster 0001.jpg
  • A nest of Mussaurus "mouse lizards" prosauropods of the Late Triassic and some of the smallest dinosaur specimens ever found were discovered near Tucuman in Argentina.  Model by artist Matt R. Smith.
    scf4399-030_Mussaurus Hatchling 0001.jpg
  • A nest of Mussaurus "mouse lizards" prosauropods of the Late Triassic and some of the smallest dinosaur specimens ever found were discovered near Tucuman in Argentina.  Model by artist Matt R. Smith.
    Mussaurus Hatchling 0001.jpg
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