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  • Chinese school children line up to view the Zigong Dinosaur Museum erected over the Dashanpu Quarry, filled with dinosaurs from the mid-Jurassic.
    Zigong Dinosaur Museum 0004.jpg
  • British Museum paleontologists in London revamp their dinosaur collection.
    scf4327-045-british museum.jpg
  • British Museum paleontologists in London revamp their dinosaur collection.
    British Museum.jpg
  • British Museum paleontologists in London revamp their dinosaur collection.
    scf4399-047Z_scf4399-029_British Mus...jpg
  • Dinoaurs mounted for St. Paul Museum of Science.
    scf4399-010-St Paul Museum 0001.jpg
  • Dale Russell curator of the Canadian Museum of Nature in Ottawa.  Russell created the Dinosauroid, a model of what he thinks a smarter dinosaur would look like today if it had survived.
    Russell Dale 0001 Curator.jpg
  • Dale Russell curator of the Canadian Museum of Nature in Ottawa.  Russell created the Dinosauroid, a model of what he thinks a smarter dinosaur would look like today if it had survived.
    scf4327-207-russell dale 0001 curato...jpg
  • This Oviraptor from the Gobi Desert in Mongolia displayed at the Ulan Bator State Museum in Mongolia.
    Oviraptor and Egg 0002.jpg
  • This Oviraptor from the Gobi Desert in Mongolia displayed at the Ulan Bator State Museum in Mongolia.
    scf4399-096_Oviraptor and Egg 0001.jpg
  • This Oviraptor from the Gobi Desert in Mongolia displayed at the Ulan Bator State Museum in Mongolia.
    scf4327-199-oviraptor and egg 0002.jpg
  • This Oviraptor from the Gobi Desert in Mongolia displayed at the Ulan Bator State Museum in Mongolia.
    Oviraptor and Egg 0001.jpg
  • T. Rex, "tyrant lizard king," was one of the largest-ever meat eating land animals.  This specimen molded from the American Museum specimen, lives at the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences in Pennsylvania.
    T rex Philadelphia 1 solo.jpg
  • This specimen lives at the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences in Pennsylvania.  School children come to the museum to get experiential learning.
    T rex Philadelphia 2 Acad_.jpg
  • A  class tour stands admires a Tarbosaur display in the Ulan Bator State Museum in Mongolia.  Related to Tyrannosaurus, a family which is a cross-cultural crowd pleaser.<br />
A  class tour stands admires a Tarbosaur display in the Ulan Bator State Museum in Mongolia.  Related to Tyrannosaurus, a family which is a cross-cultural crowd pleaser.<br />
A school boy on a class tour stands proud with a sauropod femur on display at the Ulan Bator State Museum in Mongolia.
    Tarbosaurus Mongolian Stat.jpg
  • Insects in amber from the Humboldt Museum in Berlin.
    scf4327-028-amber insect 0002.jpg
  • Mosquito in amber from the Humboldt Museum in Berlin.
    scf4327-027-amber insect 0001.jpg
  • Insects in amber from the Humboldt Museum in Berlin.
    scf4399-037_Amber Insect 0002.jpg
  • Mosquito in amber from the Humboldt Museum in Berlin.
    Amber Insect 0001.jpg
  • Dinoaurs mounted for St. Paul Museum of Science.
    scf4399-010.jpg
  • Mosquito in amber from the Humboldt Museum in Berlin.
    scf4399-036_Amber Insect 0001.jpg
  • Insects in amber from the Humboldt Museum in Berlin.
    Amber Insect 0002.jpg
  • Eoraptor Skull being prepared at the Field Museum in Chicago.
    scf4327-140_Eoraptor 0002.jpg
  • Eoraptor Skull being prepared at the Field Museum in Chicago.
    scf4327-140-eoraptor 0002.jpg
  • Protoceratops skull in the Ulan Bator State Museum in Mongolia.  Protoceratops was a four-legged plant-eater about six feet long (1.8 m).
    Protoceratops 0001.jpg
  • Eoraptor Skull being prepared at the Field Museum in Chicago.
    Eoraptor 0002.jpg
  • A researcher at the Mongolian State Museum in Ulan Bator assembles the remains of an ankylosaur discovered in the Gobi Desert.  The heavy body armor and masive tail clubs of these creatures made them a formidable opponent for even the largest of predators.
    Ankylosaur Mongolian State.jpg
  • Protoceratops skull in the Ulan Bator State Museum in Mongolia.  Protoceratops was a four-legged plant-eater about six feet long (1.8 m).
    scf4399-098_Protoceratops 0001.jpg
  • A small child wears a Trex costume outside the Cincinatti Museum Center.
    Pop Culture 0010a OhioMuseu.jpg
  • A small child wears a Trex costume outside the Cincinatti Museum Center.
    scf4373-352_Pop Culture 0010a OhioMu...jpg
  • An educator wears a triceratops costume outside the Cincinatti Museum Center.
    Pop Culture 0010 OhioMuseum.jpg
  • Allosaurus outside the Old Trail Museum in Choteau, Montana.
    Pop Culture 0003.jpg
  • William Walker, plumber and discoverer of Baryonyx, found the specimen while walking in smokejack's Quarry near Dorking on his day off and brought it to Angela Milner at the British Museum of Natural History pictured.
    scf4373-084_Baryonyx 0001 Angel Miln...jpg
  • William Walker, plumber and discoverer of Baryonyx, found the specimen while walking in smokejack's Quarry near Dorking on his day off and brought it to Angela Milner at the British Museum of Natural History pictured.
    Baryonyx 0001 Angel Milner.jpg
  • William Walker, plumber and discoverer of Baryonyx, found the specimen while walking in smokejack's Quarry near Dorking on his day off and brought it to Angela Milner at the British Museum of Natural History pictured.
    Baryonyx 0002 Angel Milner.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
  • 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
    scf4327-052_Carnotaurus 0002 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
    Carnotaurus 0002 Bonaparte.jpg
  • American Museum of Natural History Brown Bear.
    American Museum 0005.jpg
  • Reception in American Mammal Hall at the American Museum of Natural History in New York with Moose watching over the bar.
    American Museum Moose 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
  • Deinonychus sculptures in a diorama by Stephen Czerkas in the California Academy of Sciences.  The 8 -11 foot (2.5-3.5 meter) long dinosaurs were named after their bladelike claws.  Deinonychus means "terrible claws."
    Deinonychus S F Museum.jpg
  • Night watchman at the American Museum of Natural History in New York shines his light on a T. rex while making rounds.<br />
<br />
<br />
T. Rex, "tyrant lizard king," was one of the largest-ever meat eating land animals.  The bi-pedal giant grew to some 40 feet (12 meters) and weighed up to 7 US tons (6.5 metric tons) and small two-fingered hands that were actually surprisingly strong.
    scf4327-029-americanmuseumnatural 00...jpg
  • Night watchman at the American Museum of Natural History in New York shines his light on a T. rex while making rounds.<br />
<br />
<br />
T. Rex, "tyrant lizard king," was one of the largest-ever meat eating land animals.  The bi-pedal giant grew to some 40 feet (12 meters) and weighed up to 7 US tons (6.5 metric tons) and small two-fingered hands that were actually surprisingly strong.
    AmericanMuseumNatural 0002.jpg
  • Night watchman at the American Museum of Natural History in New York shines his light on a T. rex while making rounds.<br />
<br />
<br />
T. Rex, "tyrant lizard king," was one of the largest-ever meat eating land animals.  The bi-pedal giant grew to some 40 feet (12 meters) and weighed up to 7 US tons (6.5 metric tons) and small two-fingered hands that were actually surprisingly strong.
    scf4373-052_AmericanMuseumNatural 00...jpg
  • Prior to the opening of a fossil hall of the American Museum of Natural History a plesiosaur cast is assembled.
    Plesiosaur 0003.jpg
  • Louie Psihoyos, author of Hunting Dinosaurs with assistant, John Knoebber at the National Museum of Natural History in Paris.
    Nation Mus Nat HisParis0003.jpg
  • Louie Psihoyos, author of Hunting Dinosaurs with assistant, John Knoebber at the National Museum of Natural History in Paris.
    scf4327-192_Nation Mus Nat HisParis0...jpg
  • Louie Psihoyos, author of Hunting Dinosaurs with assistant, John Knoebber at the National Museum of Natural History in Paris.
    scf4327-192-nation mus nat hisparis0...jpg
  • Parts of this 140 -million year-old Barosaurus from Dinosaur National Park near Jensen, Utah, once resided simultaneously at three different museums - now it resides at the American Museum of Natural History.
    scf4327-041-barosaurus allosaurus 00...jpg
  • Parts of this 140 -million year-old Barosaurus from Dinosaur National Park near Jensen, Utah, once resided simultaneously at three different museums - now it resides at the American Museum of Natural History.
    Barosaurus Allosaurus 0002.jpg
  • National Museum of Natural History in Paris, where modern paleontology began in the eighteenth century with Baron Georges Cuvier.
    scf4373-315_Nation Mus Nat HisParis0...jpg
  • National Museum of Natural History in Paris, where modern paleontology began in the eighteenth century with Baron Georges Cuvier.
    scf4327-191_Nation Mus Nat HisParis0...jpg
  • National Museum of Natural History in Paris, where modern paleontology began in the eighteenth century with Baron Georges Cuvier.
    Nation Mus Nat HisParis0001.jpg
  • Dinosaur model maker Peter May of Research Castin international, Toronto, Canada, puts the final touches on an Allosaurus cast bound for the front hall of the American Museum of Natural History.
    Allosaurus 0004.jpg
  • National Museum of Natural History in Paris, where modern paleontology began in the eighteenth century with Baron Georges Cuvier.
    scf4327-191-nation mus nat hisparis0...jpg
  • National Museum of Natural History in Paris, where modern paleontology began in the eighteenth century with Baron Georges Cuvier.
    scf4327-190-nation mus nat hisparis0...jpg
  • National Museum of Natural History in Paris, where modern paleontology began in the eighteenth century with Baron Georges Cuvier.
    Nation Mus Nat HisParis0002.jpg
  • Dinosaur model maker Peter May of Research Castin international, Toronto, Canada, puts the final touches on an Allosaurus cast bound for the front hall of the American Museum of Natural History.
    Allosaurus 0003.jpg
  • Dinosaur model maker Peter May of Research Castin international, Toronto, Canada, puts the final touches on an Allosaurus cast bound for the front hall of the American Museum of Natural History.
    Allosaurus 0002.jpg
  • Dinosaur model maker Peter May of Research Casting International, Toronto, Canada, puts the final touches on an Allosaurus cast bound for the front hall of the American Museum of Natural History in New York.
    Allosaurus 0001.jpg
  • Parts of this 140 -million year-old Barosaurus from Dinosaur National Park near Jensen, Utah, once resided simultaneously at three different museums - now it resides at the American Museum of Natural History.
    scf4399-044_Barosaurus Allosaurus 00...jpg
  • A caravan of vehicles on a paleontological expedition from the American Museum of Natural History travels near Ukhaa Tolgod in the Gobi Desert.
    Gobi Desert 0001.jpg
  • Parts of this 140 -million year-old Barosaurus from Dinosaur National Park near Jensen, Utah, once resided simultaneously at three different museums - now it resides at the American Museum of Natural History.
    Barosaurus Allosaurus 0001.jpg
  • A caravan of vehicles on a paleontological expedition from the American Museum of Natural History travels near Ukhaa Tolgod in the Gobi Desert.
    scf4327-148_Gobi Desert 0001.jpg
  • A caravan of vehicles on a paleontological expedition from the American Museum of Natural History travels near Ukhaa Tolgod in the Gobi Desert.
    scf4327-148-gobi desert 0001.jpg
  • Blue Whale at the American Museum of Natural History.
    Blue Whale 0001 American.jpg
  • The Teddy Roosevelt statue in front of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.
    AmericanMuseumNatural 0003.jpg
  • The Brontosaurus at the American Museum of Natural History rests on a real trackway from Texas.
    scf4373-096_Brontosaurus 0008 Americ...jpg
  • Blue Whale at the American Museum of Natural History.
    scf4370-090_Blue Whale 0001 American.jpg
  • The Brontosaurus at the American Museum of Natural History rests on a real trackway from Texas.
    Brontosaurus 0008 American.jpg
  • Two fine Photo sapien specimens, John Knoebber and I, are admired by grade-school visitors at the National Museum of Natural History in Paris, where modern paleontology began in the eighteen century with Baron Georges Cuvier.
    Psihoyos 0002 paris.jpg
  • Prior to the opening of a fossil hall of the American Museum of Natural History a plesiosaur cast is assembled.
    scf4327-204_Plesiosaur 0002 American...jpg
  • Prior to the opening of a fossil hall of the American Museum of Natural History a plesiosaur cast is assembled.
    scf4327-204-plesiosaur 0002 american...jpg
  • Prior to the opening of a fossil hall of the American Museum of Natural History a plesiosaur cast is assembled.
    Plesiosaur 0002 American Mu.jpg
  • Prior to the opening of a fossil hall of the American Museum of Natural History a plesiosaur cast is assembled.
    Plesiosaur 0001 American Mu.jpg
  • A caravan of vehicles on a paleontological expedition from the American Museum of Natural History travels near Ukhaa Tolgod in the Gobi Desert a vast cemetary of Cretaceous dinosaurs and mammals.
    scf4327-147-gobi 0002 ukhaatolgod.jpg
  • A caravan of vehicles on a paleontological expedition from the American Museum of Natural History travels near Ukhaa Tolgod in the Gobi Desert a vast cemetary of Cretaceous dinosaurs and mammals.
    scf4327-147_Gobi 0002 UkhaaTolgod.jpg
  • A caravan of vehicles on a paleontological expedition from the American Museum of Natural History travels near Ukhaa Tolgod in the Gobi Desert a vast cemetary of Cretaceous dinosaurs and mammals.
    Gobi 0097 Ukhaa Caravan.jpg
  • A caravan of vehicles on a paleontological expedition from the American Museum of Natural History travels near Ukhaa Tolgod in the Gobi Desert a vast cemetary of Cretaceous dinosaurs and mammals.
    Gobi 0002 UkhaaTolgod.jpg
  • The Brontosaurus at the American Museum of Natural is cleaned.
    scf4399-049_Brontosaurus 0007 Americ...jpg
  • The Brontosaurus at the American Museum of Natural is cleaned.
    Brontosaurus 0007 American.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
  • Working eventually with more Iguanodon remains, Gideon Mantell made the first reconstruction of a dinosaur above.  From the Natural History Museum, London.
    scf4327-162_Iguanodon 0009 Drawing.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
  • Working eventually with more Iguanodon remains, Gideon Mantell made the first reconstruction of a dinosaur above.  From the Natural History Museum, London.
    scf4327-162-iguanodon 0009 drawing.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 is in this specimen's stomach.
    scf4327-060-coelophysis 0001 colbert.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 is in this specimen's stomach.
    Coelophysis 0001 Colbert.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
  • Working eventually with more Iguanodon remains, Gideon Mantell made the first reconstruction of a dinosaur above.  From the Natural History Museum, London.
    Iguanodon 0009 Drawing.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
  • Track site near Cameron, Arizona discovered by Barnum Brown of the American Museum of Natural History in the 1930's.
    Dinosaur Tracks Navajo 0002.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 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.
    Cope 0002CopeMarshStillLife.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
  • A newly discovered 5 " long therian mammal from the Gobi Desert discovered by the American Museum of Natural History Expeditions to Mongolia.  The little creature was a contemporary of dinosaurs.
    scf4399-087_Mammal Therian 0001 Gobi.jpg
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