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  • Blood testing at Yale Medical School in New Haven, Conneticut.
    scf4356-165_Yale Med School 0001.jpg
  • Cesar Pelli, designed some of the world's biggest buildings.  Photographed at Cesar Pelli & Associates in New Haven, CT.<br />
.
    Pelli Ceasar 0001.jpg
  • Cesar Pelli, designed some of the world's biggest buildings.  Photographed at Cesar Pelli & Associates in New Haven, CT.
    scf4327-588pelli ceasar 0002.jpg
  • Cesar Pelli, designed some of the world's biggest buildings.  Photographed at Cesar Pelli & Associates in New Haven, CT.<br />
.
    scf4327-587pelli ceasar 0001.jpg
  • Cesar Pelli, designed some of the world's biggest buildings.  Photographed at Cesar Pelli & Associates in New Haven, CT.
    Pelli Ceasar 0002.jpg
  • Professor John Ostrom of Yale University discovered Deinonychus, a pack-hunting dinosaur that terrorized victims during the Cretaceous with sicklelike claws on its feet.  Deinonychus means "terrible claw."
    Deinonychus 0006.jpg
  • Professor John Ostrom of Yale University discovered Deinonychus, a pack-hunting dinosaur that terrorized victims during the Cretaceous with sicklelike claws on its feet.  Deinonychus means "terrible claw."
    scf4327-076-deinonychus 0006.jpg
  • Professor John Ostrom of Yale University discovered Deinonychus, a pack-hunting dinosaur that terrorized victims during the Cretaceous with sicklelike claws on its feet.  Deinonychus means "terrible claw."
    scf4327-583ostrom john 0001deinonych...jpg
  • Professor John Ostrom of Yale University discovered Deinonychus, a pack-hunting dinosaur that terrorized victims during the Cretaceous with sicklelike claws on its feet.  Deinonychus means "terrible claw."
    Ostrom John 0001Deinonychus.jpg
  • It takes 3 times more energy to venilate a smokers workspace according to studies at the Pierce Foundation in New Haven, Connecticut.  Volunteers smoke and a duct outside is measured by odor judges outside.
    scf4327-835_Smell 0020 Smokers.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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • Original Print from Marsh drawing of Brontosaurus.
    Brontosaurus Drawing Marsh.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
  • Professor John Ostrom of Yale University discovered Deinonychus, a pack-hunting dinosaur that terrorized victims during the Cretaceous with sicklelike claws on its feet.  Deinonychus means "terrible claw."
    Ostrom John 0003.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.
    scf4327-183_Marsh Portrait 0002.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
  • Portrait of O.C. Marsh, founder of the Yale Peabody Museum.
    Marsh Portrait 0002.jpg
  • Professor John Ostrom of Yale University discovered Deinonychus, a pack-hunting dinosaur that terrorized victims during the Cretaceous with sicklelike claws on its feet.  Deinonychus means "terrible claw."
    Deinonychus John Ostrom.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
  • Professor John Ostrom of Yale University discovered Deinonychus, a pack-hunting dinosaur that terrorized victims during the Cretaceous with sicklelike claws on its feet.  Deinonychus means "terrible claw."
    scf4327-075-deinonychus 0002.jpg
  • Professor John Ostrom of Yale University discovered Deinonychus, a pack-hunting dinosaur that terrorized victims during the Cretaceous with sicklelike claws on its feet.  Deinonychus means "terrible claw."
    Deinonychus 0001.jpg
  • Professor John Ostrom of Yale University discovered Deinonychus, a pack-hunting dinosaur that terrorized victims during the Cretaceous with sicklelike claws on its feet.  Deinonychus means "terrible claw."
    scf4327-075_Deinonychus 0002.jpg
  • Professor John Ostrom of Yale University discovered Deinonychus, a pack-hunting dinosaur that terrorized victims during the Cretaceous with sicklelike claws on its feet.  Deinonychus means "terrible claw."
    Deinonychus 0002.jpg
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