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  • Billed as the world's oldest house, a fossil shop near Bone Cabin Quarry is constructed of Jurassic dinosaur bones about 145 million years old.
    Fossil Cabin 0001.jpg
  • Artifacts from the lives of archenemies O.C. Marsh (left) and Edward Drinker Cope.  From Yale University, the Marsh pick became the standard for today's paleontologists.  Marsh's commissioned drawings of a Ceratosaurus, from the archives of the Smithsonian Institution, provide a backdrop for his compass and portrait of him (center row middle) and his 1870 field crew to the West.  Cope artifacts include: his pick and field diary from the American Museum of Natural History; from the Smithsonian archives, headlines of the original New York Herald chronicling their public fued; field specimens discovered in the vaults of the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences, left as Cope had prepared them for shipment - still wrapped in newspapsers of the day, the Fargo Forum and the Sioux County Herald, both dated 1893.  From the University of Pennsylvania, the bones of the legendary bone hunter himself, Professor Edward Drinker Cope.
    Cope 0003CopeMarshStillLife.jpg
  • Artifacts from the lives of archenemies O.C. Marsh (left) and Edward Drinker Cope.  From Yale University, the Marsh pick became the standard for today's paleontologists.  Marsh's commissioned drawings of a Ceratosaurus, from the archives of the Smithsonian Institution, provide a backdrop for his compass and portrait of him (center row middle) and his 1870 field crew to the West.  Cope artifacts include: his pick and field diary from the American Museum of Natural History; from the Smithsonian archives, headlines of the original New York Herald chronicling their public fued; field specimens discovered in the vaults of the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences, left as Cope had prepared them for shipment - still wrapped in newspapsers of the day, the Fargo Forum and the Sioux County Herald, both dated 1893.  From the University of Pennsylvania, the bones of the legendary bone hunter himself, Professor Edward Drinker Cope.
    scf4327-064-cope 0002copemarshstilll...jpg
  • Artifacts from the lives of archenemies O.C. Marsh (left) and Edward Drinker Cope.  From Yale University, the Marsh pick became the standard for today's paleontologists.  Marsh's commissioned drawings of a Ceratosaurus, from the archives of the Smithsonian Institution, provide a backdrop for his compass and portrait of him (center row middle) and his 1870 field crew to the West.  Cope artifacts include: his pick and field diary from the American Museum of Natural History; from the Smithsonian archives, headlines of the original New York Herald chronicling their public fued; field specimens discovered in the vaults of the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences, left as Cope had prepared them for shipment - still wrapped in newspapsers of the day, the Fargo Forum and the Sioux County Herald, both dated 1893.  From the University of Pennsylvania, the bones of the legendary bone hunter himself, Professor Edward Drinker Cope.
    Cope 0002CopeMarshStillLife.jpg
  • Octogenarian bone hunter Same Welles, researcher at the University of California at Berkeley, with a cast of Dilophosaurus, the "double crested reptile," a Jurassic-aged carnivorous dinosaur he found on a Navajo Reservation.
    scf4327-677welles sam 0002 dilophosa...jpg
  • Octogenarian bone hunter Same Welles, researcher at the University of California at Berkeley, with a cast of Dilophosaurus, the "double crested reptile," a Jurassic-aged carnivorous dinosaur he found on a Navajo Reservation.
    scf4327-238_Welles Sam 0002 Dilophos...jpg
  • Octogenarian bone hunter Same Welles, researcher at the University of California at Berkeley, with a cast of Dilophosaurus, the "double crested reptile," a Jurassic-aged carnivorous dinosaur he found on a Navajo Reservation.
    scf4327-238-welles sam 0002 dilophos...jpg
  • Octogenarian bone hunter Same Welles, researcher at the University of California at Berkeley, with a cast of Dilophosaurus, the "double crested reptile," a Jurassic-aged carnivorous dinosaur he found on a Navajo Reservation.
    scf4327-237-welles sam 0001 dilophos...jpg
  • Octogenarian bone hunter Same Welles, researcher at the University of California at Berkeley, with a cast of Dilophosaurus, the "double crested reptile," a Jurassic-aged carnivorous dinosaur he found on a Navajo Reservation.
    Welles Sam 0002 Dilophosaur.jpg
  • Octogenarian bone hunter Same Welles, researcher at the University of California at Berkeley, with a cast of Dilophosaurus, the "double crested reptile," a Jurassic-aged carnivorous dinosaur he found on a Navajo Reservation.
    Welles Sam 0002 Dilophosaur-3.jpg
  • Octogenarian bone hunter Same Welles, researcher at the University of California at Berkeley, with a cast of Dilophosaurus, the "double crested reptile," a Jurassic-aged carnivorous dinosaur he found on a Navajo Reservation.
    Welles Sam 0001 Dilophosaur.jpg
  • Octogenarian bone hunter Same Welles, researcher at the University of California at Berkeley, with a cast of Dilophosaurus, the "double crested reptile," a Jurassic-aged carnivorous dinosaur he found on a Navajo Reservation.
    Welles Sam 0001 Dilophosaur-2.jpg
  • Paleontologist Darren Tanke of the Royal Tyrrell Museum prepares an Albertasaur bone near Dinosaur Provincial Park, a site previously discovered in the early 1900's by Barnum Brown of the American Museum of Natural History.
    Tanke Darren 0001.jpg
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie said, If you throw your hat and it doesn't come with twenty feet of dinosaur bone, then you're not in Dinosaur Park."
    Dinosaur ProvincialPark0008.jpg
  • This 4-inch long embryonic hadrodsaur upper leg bone in my hand would have grown to 4 feet in just a couple of years.  It is thought that small dinosaurs had to grow up quickly to avoid predators.
    Dino Growth.jpg
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie said, If you throw your hat and it doesn't come with twenty feet of dinosaur bone, then you're not in Dinosaur Park."
    scf4373-185_Dinosaur ProvincialPark0...jpg
  • Octogenarian bone hunter Same Welles, researcher at the University of California at Berkeley, with a cast of Dilophosaurus, the "double crested reptile," a Jurassic-aged carnivorous dinosaur he found on a Navajo Reservation.
    scf4327-676welles sam 0001 dilophosa...jpg
  • Octogenarian bone hunter Same Welles, researcher at the University of California at Berkeley, with a cast of Dilophosaurus, the "double crested reptile," a Jurassic-aged carnivorous dinosaur he found on a Navajo Reservation.
    Welles Sam 0002 Dilophosaur-2.jpg
  • Chinese apothecaries, like this one in Beijing, still sell ground-up dinosaur bone for pharmaceutical purposes.  "Stone dragon bones" are believed to have the power to cure a variety of ailments.<br />
Chinese apothecaries, like this one in Beijing, still sell ground-up dinosaur bone for pharmaceutical purposes.  "Stone dragon bones" are believed to have the power to cure a variety of ailments.
    scf4327-058-chinese apothecary 0001.jpg
  • Chinese apothecaries, like this one in Beijing, still sell ground-up dinosaur bone for pharmaceutical purposes.  "Stone dragon bones" are believed to have the power to cure a variety of ailments.<br />
Chinese apothecaries, like this one in Beijing, still sell ground-up dinosaur bone for pharmaceutical purposes.  "Stone dragon bones" are believed to have the power to cure a variety of ailments.
    Chinese Apothecary 0001.jpg
  • Chinese apothecaries, like this one in Beijing, still sell ground-up dinosaur bone for pharmaceutical purposes.  "Stone dragon bones" are believed to have the power to cure a variety of ailments.
    Chinese Apothecary 0002.jpg
  • Chinese apothecaries, like this one in Beijing, still sell ground-up dinosaur bone for pharmaceutical purposes.  "Stone dragon bones" are believed to have the power to cure a variety of ailments.
    scf4399-053_Chinese Apothecary 0002.jpg
  • Chinese apothecaries, like this one in Beijing, still sell ground-up dinosaur bone for pharmaceutical purposes.  "Stone dragon bones" are believed to have the power to cure a variety of ailments.
    Chinese Apothecary 0003.jpg
  • Paleontologist Jack Horner Field Station School at Egg Mountain near Choteau, Montana.  Jack was much of the inspiration for Michael Crighton's Jurassic Park novel.  Bones some several species of dinosaurs abound the area.
    Horner Jack 0026.jpg
  • A school boy in a tradional dell (or deel) on a class tour stands proud with a sauropod femur on display at the Ulan Bator State Museum in Mongolia.
    scf4327-208_Sauropod bone UBBOY 0001.jpg
  • A school boy in a tradional dell (or deel) on a class tour stands proud with a sauropod femur on display at the Ulan Bator State Museum in Mongolia.
    Sauropod bone UBBOY 0001.jpg
  • A school boy on a class tour stands proud with a sauropod femur on display at the Ulan Bator State Museum in Mongolia.<br />
A school boy in a tradional dell (or deel) on a class tour stands proud with a sauropod femur on display at the Ulan Bator State Museum in Mongolia.
    Sauropod bone UBBOY 0002.jpg
  • Arthur Lakes school teacher and amateur fossil hunter who touched off the great bone wars by sending fossils he collected near Morrison, Colorado to O.C. Marsh made this drawing at Como Bluff, Wyoming.
    scf4327-180-lakes aurthur como bluff.jpg
  • Arthur Lakes school teacher and amateur fossil hunter who touched off the great bone wars by sending fossils he collected near Morrison, Colorado to O.C. Marsh made this drawing at Como Bluff, Wyoming.
    Lakes Aurthur Como Bluff.jpg
  • A postmortem reunion of rivals Cope and Marsh.  In their celebrated feud, known as the Great Bone Wars, 136 new species of dinosaurs were described.  Cope's skull is in the cardboard box last used for electrical parts.
    Cope 0014 Marsh Grave.jpg
  • A postmortem reunion of rivals Cope and Marsh.  In their celebrated feud, known as the Great Bone Wars, 136 new species of dinosaurs were described.  This oil painting was made of alive sitting with Marsh.  The skull is Cope's.
    Cope 0004 Skull w Marsh.jpg
  • It is thought that a Furculum of two clavicles, or "wish bone" was a necessary evolutionary development for flight.  Oviraptors had one like this specimen found in the Gobi Desert of Mongolia by the American Museum Expedition.
    scf4421-023_oviraptor 0009 furculum.jpg
  • While hanging from a rope, Hans Larsson excavates a toe bone of a centrosaur.
    scf4373-186_Dinosaur ProvincialPark0...jpg
  • An Orodromeus egg with the bones of an embryo inside, found by Jack Horner's field crew near Choteau.
    scf4327-083-dino egg 0055 orodromeus.jpg
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie's, far right, excavates a herd of Centrosaurs at Dinosaur Provincial Park.  The herd may have died in the Cretaceous when they tried to navigate a river.  The bone bed extends to the opposite cliffs.
    Currie Phil 0011 Provincial.jpg
  • It is thought that a Furculum of two clavicles, or "wish bone" was a necessary evolutionary development for flight.  Oviraptors had one like this specimen found in the Gobi Desert of Mongolia by the American Museum Expedition.
    Oviraptor 0009 Furculum.jpg
  • While hanging from a rope, Hans Larsson excavates a toe bone of a centrosaur.
    Dinosaur ProvincialPark0009.jpg
  • While hanging from a rope, Hans Larsson excavates a toe bone of a centrosaur.
    Dinosaur ProvincialPark0006.jpg
  • An Orodromeus egg with the bones of an embryo inside, found by Jack Horner's field crew near Choteau.
    Dino Egg 0055 Orodromeus.jpg
  • Dave Thomas excavates Seismosaurus bones which are the same color as the stone surrounding them.  Bones from the Morrison Formation are about 200X more radioactive than the stone so a black light is used in preparation.<br />
Dave Thomas excavates Seismosaurus bones which are the same color as the stone surrounding them.  Bones from the Morrison Formation are about 200X more radioactive than the stone so a black light is used in preparation.
    Seismosaurus Radioactiv0001.jpg
  • A T. rex named Black Beauty for its dark magnesium-rich bones seems to writhe in pain as a welder prepares its frame for the Ex Terra traveling dinosaur show.<br />
A T. rex named Black Beauty for its dark magnesium-rich bones seems to writhe in pain as a welder prepares its frame for the Ex Terra traveling dinosaur show.<br />
A T. rex named Black Beauty for its dark magnesium-rich bones seems to writhe in pain as a welder prepares its frame for the Ex Terra traveling dinosaur show.
    T rex Black Beauty0001.jpg
  • A T. rex named Black Beauty for its dark magnesium-rich bones seems to writhe in pain as a welder prepares its frame for the Ex Terra traveling dinosaur show.<br />
<br />
A T. rex named Black Beauty for its dark magnesium-rich bones seems to writhe in pain as a welder prepares its frame for the Ex Terra traveling dinosaur show.<br />
A T. rex named Black Beauty for its dark magnesium-rich bones seems to writhe in pain as a welder prepares its frame for the Ex Terra traveling dinosaur show.
    T rex Black Beauty0002.jpg
  • A T. rex named Black Beauty for its dark magnesium-rich bones seems to writhe in pain as a welder prepares its frame for the Ex Terra traveling dinosaur show.<br />
A T. rex named Black Beauty for its dark magnesium-rich bones seems to writhe in pain as a welder prepares its frame for the Ex Terra traveling dinosaur show.
    scf4327-218-t rex black beauty0004.jpg
  • A T. rex named Black Beauty for its dark magnesium-rich bones seems to writhe in pain as a welder prepares its frame for the Ex Terra traveling dinosaur show.<br />
A T. rex named Black Beauty for its dark magnesium-rich bones seems to writhe in pain as a welder prepares its frame for the Ex Terra traveling dinosaur show.
    T rex Black Beauty0004.jpg
  • Dave Thomas excavates Seismosaurus bones which are the same color as the stone surrounding them.  Bones from the Morrison Formation are about 200X more radioactive than the stone so a black light is used in preparation.
    Seismosaurus Radioactiv0002.jpg
  • Paleontologists have chiseled the remains of several hundred Jurassic dinosaurs when work began in 1909 at what became the Carnegie Quarry near Jensen, utah.  The site is now known as Dinosaur National Monument.
    Dinosaur Natl Monument 0002.jpg
  • The Earth Sciences Museum's storage space having run out, Jim Jensen's legacy, over one hundred tons of unprepared material still wrapped in plaster jackets, lies in storage below the football stadium bleachers at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah.   Pictured is the University paleontologist Wade Miller.
    Brigham Young Stadium 0001.jpg
  • A T. rex named Black Beauty for its dark magnesium-rich bones seems to writhe in pain as a welder prepares its frame for the Ex Terra traveling dinosaur show.<br />
A T. rex named Black Beauty for its dark magnesium-rich bones seems to writhe in pain as a welder prepares its frame for the Ex Terra traveling dinosaur show.
    scf4399-100_T rex Black Beauty0004.jpg
  • The Earth Sciences Museum's storage space having run out, Jim Jensen's legacy, over one hundred tons of unprepared material still wrapped in plaster jackets, lies in storage below the football stadium bleachers at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah.   Pictured is the University paleontologist Wade Miller.
    Brigham Young Stadium 0002.jpg
  • Paleontologists have chiseled the remains of several hundred Jurassic dinosaurs since work began in 1909 near Jensen, Utah. A building was put over the site in 1958 to preserve the bones, which attract nearly 500,00 visitors per year.Stegasaurus Model Outside the Main Building
    Pop Culture 0013 Natl Monu.jpg
  • A graduate student at Brigham Young University prepares a quarry map of the location of all the bones found in their orientation at Cleveland Lloyd Quarry, an allosaurus quarry.
    scf4327-206_Quarry Map 0001 Clevelan...jpg
  • A T. rex named Black Beauty for its dark magnesium-rich bones seems to writhe in pain as a welder prepares its frame for the Ex Terra traveling dinosaur show.
    T rex Black Beauty0003.jpg
  • A graduate student at Brigham Young University prepares a quarry map of the location of all the bones found in their orientation at Cleveland Lloyd Quarry, an allosaurus quarry.
    Quarry Map 0001 Cleveland L.jpg
  • Bones of the first known oviraptor embryo and the skull of a young dromeosaur were found in the Gobi Desert by a team of paleontologists from the American Museum of Natural History.
    Dino Skull and Micrometer.jpg
  • A T. rex named Black Beauty for its dark magnesium-rich bones seems to writhe in pain as a welder prepares its frame for the Ex Terra traveling dinosaur show.
    scf4327-217-t rex black beauty0003.jpg
  • A graduate student at Brigham Young University prepares a quarry map of the location of all the bones found in their orientation at Cleveland Lloyd Quarry, an allosaurus quarry.
    scf4327-206-quarry map 0001 clevelan...jpg
  • A graduate student at Brigham Young University prepares a quarry map of the location of all the bones found in their orientation at Cleveland Lloyd Quarry, an allosaurus quarry.
    scf4327-059_Cleveland Lloyd Quarry M...jpg
  • A graduate student at Brigham Young University prepares a quarry map of the location of all the bones found in their orientation at Cleveland Lloyd Quarry, an allosaurus quarry.
    scf4327-059-cleveland lloyd quarry m...jpg
  • A graduate student at Brigham Young University prepares a quarry map of the location of all the bones found in their orientation at Cleveland Lloyd Quarry, an allosaurus quarry.
    Cleveland Lloyd Quarry Map_.jpg
  • Portrait of O.C. Marsh, (Rear Center) founder of the Yale Peabody Museum with his 1870 field crew to the West.
    scf4327-184_Marsh Portrait 0003field...jpg
  • Portrait of O.C. Marsh, (Rear Center) founder of the Yale Peabody Museum with his 1870 field crew to the West.
    scf4327-184-marsh portrait 0003field...jpg
  • Portrait of O.C. Marsh, founder of the Yale Peabody Museum and arch rival of Edward Drinker Cope.
    scf4327-183-marsh portrait 0001.jpg
  • Group Portrait with O.C. Marsh, third from right, founder of the Yale Peabody Museum with his field crew from the 1870's.
    Marsh Portrait 0005fieldcrw.jpg
  • Portrait of O.C. Marsh, founder of the Yale Peabody Museum.
    scf4327-183_Marsh Portrait 0002.jpg
  • Portrait of O.C. Marsh, founder of the Yale Peabody Museum.
    Marsh Portrait 0002.jpg
  • Portrait of O.C. Marsh, founder of the Yale Peabody Museum and arch rival of Edward Drinker Cope.
    Marsh Portrait 0001.jpg
  • Portrait of O.C. Marsh, founder of the Yale Peabody Museum with Sitting Bull.
    Marsh Portrait 0004SittingB.jpg
  • Portrait of O.C. Marsh, (Rear Center) founder of the Yale Peabody Museum with his 1870 field crew to the West.
    Marsh Portrait 0003fieldcrw.jpg
  • Paul Sereno, associate professor of paleontology at the U. of Chicago with reconstructed Carcharodontosaurus skull of this 90 million-year-old meat-eating dinosaur he discovered in the Sahara in Niger, Africa
    scf4327-050-carcharodontosaurus 0003.jpg
  • Jim Jensen has excavated the shoulder blade of an animal, from Dry Mesa Quarry in Colorado, Ultrasaurus, perhaps the largest animal to ever walk the earth.  He stands with the extrapolated cast of its foreleg hung from a crane.
    Jensen Jim 0002.jpg
  • Dinosaur Tracker, Martin Lockley crouches in the hole of giant sauropod footprint as he prepares to make a cast.
    Dinosaur Tracks Lockley0004.jpg
  • Perle, Mongolian Paleontologist with a Giant Duckbill Dinosaur at the Ulan Bator State Museum in Mongolia.  The plant eater was found in the Gobi Desert.
    scf4399-078_Duckbill Mongolia w Perl...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
  • Venetian entrepreneur and dinosaur expediton leader Giancarlo Ligabue with Ouranosaurus, a herbivorous sail-backed dinosaur excavated from the Sahara Desert of Niger on a joint campaign with Philippe Taquet.
    scf4327-197-ouranosaurus 0003 ligabu...jpg
  • Mononykus, found in the Gobi Desert of Mongolia was considered a primitive bird.
    scf4327-186-mononykus 0003 w rooster.jpg
  • Therizinosaur nest from the Cretaceous in China about 110 - 65 million years ago.  They were related to T.rex but much smaller, about ten feet-long (3 meters).
    scf4327-096-dino egg nest china 0002.jpg
  • Insects in amber from the Humboldt Museum in Berlin.
    scf4327-028-amber insect 0002.jpg
  • Dave Thomas drives his 33-foot-long (10M) allosaurus to California past the Zia Pueblo Reservation in Arizona.
    scf4327-026-allosaurus on pickup 000...jpg
  • A mold of a T.rex tooth is made before it is cast at the Black Hills Institute in South Dakota.
    T rex Tooth 0001.jpg
  • T. Rexwas one of the largest-ever meat eating land animals.  The bi-pedal giant grew to some 40 ft (12 meters) and weighed up to 7 US tons (6.5 metric tons) It's mall two-fingered hands were actually surprisingly strong.
    T rex Portrait Side 3.jpg
  • Mononykus, found in the Gobi Desert of Mongolia was considered a primitive bird.
    Mononykus 0006.jpg
  • Dinosaurs, like sharks, continually shed their teeth when feeding and new teeth would sprout up to take a broken ones place like on this Megalosaurus jaw from the Museum of Natural History in London<br />
Shed teeth of Jurassic Perpetrator Allosaurus found at Como Bluff by paleontologist Bob Bakker.
    Megalosaur 0001 Jaw Teeth.jpg
  • Terry Manning paleontologist from Leicester, England patiently prepares fossilized embryos with a diluted solution of acetic acid which eats away matrix at a few thousandths of an inch per day over a year-long process.
    Dino Eggs Manning Terry.jpg
  • Dave Thomas drives his 33-foot-long (10M) Albertasaur to California past the Zia Pueblo Reservation in Arizona.
    Albertasaur on Pickup 0001.jpg
  • Paleontologist Dong Zhiming with about 175 dinosaur eggs of varying species confiscated and brought to the Institute of Cultural Relics.  Authorities confiscated some 3000 eggs in 1993.
    scf4399-062_Dino Egg Nest China 0003.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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • The middle Jurassic was pretty much a black hole in dinosaur research until the mid-1970's, when a road crew cutting a swatch for a new hiway outside Zigong discovered a virtual cemetery of them.
    Zigong Dinosaur Museum 0002.jpg
  • The middle Jurassic was pretty much a black hole in dinosaur research until the mid-1970's, when a road crew cutting a swatch for a new hiway outside Zigong discovered a virtual cemetery of them.
    Zigong Dinosaur Museum 0001.jpg
  • Dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous near Shandong, China and where the beer Tsintao is from.
    Tsintaosaurus.jpg
  • A Seismosaurus site in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Part of the upper Morrison Formation dating 154 million years.  These gastroliths were found near the rib cage and are believed to have aided in digestion much like birds todays.
    scf4373-227_Gastroliths 0001.jpg
  • Baron Cuvier, French Scientis, is considered to be the father  of modern paleontology and comparative anatomy. He popularized the idea of extinction and debunked the myth that  all creatures still existed in unexplored parts of the planet.
    scf4373-147_Cuvier Baron Georges 000...jpg
  • Phil Currie, curator of dinosaurs for the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology in Drumheller, Canada excavates an egg nest on Green Dragon Mountain in Hubei Province of China.
    scf4373-136_Currie Dino Egg China 00...jpg
  • Paleontologists Dale Russell of Ottawa and Paul Sereno of the U. of Chicago are introduced to the legendary Professor Cope.  Paul found an anatomical clue to the source of the late professor's headaches, an abscessed tooth.
    scf4373-126_Cope 0019 Sereno Russell.jpg
  • A Seismosaurus site in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Part of the upper Morrison Formation dating 154 million years.  The excavation took seven years due to the concrete-like consistency of the surrounding rock.
    Seismosaurus Site NM 0001.jpg
  • The Brontosaurus at the American Museum of Natural is cleaned.
    scf4399-049_Brontosaurus 0007 Americ...jpg
  • Edwin Colbert, former chairman of the Department of Paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History rediscovered Coelophysis at Ghost Ranch in 1947.  Baby Coelophysis are in this specimen's stomach.
    scf4399-054_Coelophysis 0002.jpg
  • Insects in amber from the Humboldt Museum in Berlin.
    scf4399-037_Amber Insect 0002.jpg
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