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  • Dinosaur Tracker, Martin Lockley crouches in the hole of giant sauropod footprint as he prepares to make a cast.
    Dinosaur Tracks Lockley0004.jpg
  • At a dinosaur trackway site near Cameron, Arizona, native American Jason Stevens tries unsuccessfully to match the stride of an ancient predator which was as fast as an Olympian athlete's.
    scf4327-127_Dinosaur Tracks Navajo 0...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.
    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.
    scf4399-070_Dinosaur Tracks Andes 00...jpg
  • An eighth-century landslide in the Alps above Trento, Italy, inspired Dante's metaphorical stairway to hell in the "Inferno" and later revealed dinosaur tracks, like those studied by Giuseppe Leonardi of Venice.
    Dinosaur Tracks 0017 Guisep.jpg
  • Dinosaur Tracker, Martin Lockley and brontosaur trackways near the Purgatoire R.  in S.E CO.  The parallel tracks, along an ancient shoreline of the Morrison Formation he sites as evidence sauropods were social animals.
    scf4373-214_Dinosaur Tracks Lockley0...jpg
  • Miners of the Smoky River Coal Company discovered a spectacular dinosaur footprint site during strip-mining operations near the foothills of the Canadian Rockies near Grand Cache, Alberta.
    scf4327-123_Dinosaur Tracks Grand 00...jpg
  • At a dinosaur trackway site near Cameron, Arizona, native American Jason Stevens tries unsuccessfully to match the stride of an ancient predator which was as fast as an Olympian athlete's.
    Dinosaur Tracks Navajo 0004.jpg
  • Miners of the Smoky River Coal Company discovered a spectacular dinosaur footprint site during strip-mining operations near the foothills of the Canadian Rockies near Grand Cache, Alberta.
    scf4327-123-dinosaur tracks grand 00...jpg
  • An eighth-century landslide in the Alps above Trento, Italy, inspired Dante's metaphorical stairway to hell in the "Inferno" and later revealed dinosaur tracks, like those studied by Giuseppe Leonardi of Venice.
    Dinosaur Tracks 0018 Guisep.jpg
  • Paleontologist Jim Farlow's computer-mapped image of a Texas therapod track.
    scf4373-195_Dinosaur Track 0039.jpg
  • At a dinosaur trackway site near Cameron, Arizona, native American Jason Stevens tries unsuccessfully to match the stride of an ancient predator which was as fast as an Olympian athlete's.
    Dinosaur Tracks Navajo 0003.jpg
  • A Therapod track from Glen Rose Texas.
    scf4327-114-dinosaur tracks 0001 gle...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
  • Dinosaur Tracker, Martin Lockley and brontosaur trackways near the Purgatoire R.  in S.E CO.  The parallel tracks, along an ancient shoreline of the Morrison Formation he sites as evidence sauropods were social animals.
    Dinosaur Tracks Lockley0006.jpg
  • At a dinosaur trackway site near Cameron, Arizona, native American Jason Stevens tries unsuccessfully to match the stride of an ancient predator which was as fast as an Olympian athlete's.
    scf4327-127-dinosaur tracks navajo 0...jpg
  • Dinosaur Tracker, Martin Lockley investigates brontosaur trackways near the Purgatoire River in S.E CO.  The parallel tracks, along an ancient lake shoreline of the Morrison Formation are convincing evidence sauropods were social.
    scf4399-073_Dinosaur Tracks Lockley0...jpg
  • An eighth-century landslide in the Alps above Trento, Italy, inspired Dante's metaphorical stairway to hell in the "Inferno" and later revealed dinosaur tracks, like those studied by Giuseppe Leonardi of Venice.
    scf4373-196_Dinosaur Tracks 0017 Gui...jpg
  • Miners of the Smoky River Coal Company discovered a spectacular dinosaur footprint site during strip-mining operations near the foothills of the Canadian Rockies near Grand Cache, Alberta.
    Dinosaur Tracks Grand 0008.jpg
  • Dinosaur Tracker, Martin Lockley investigates brontosaur trackways near the Purgatoire River in S.E CO.  The parallel tracks, along an ancient lake shoreline of the Morrison Formation are convincing evidence sauropods were social.
    Dinosaur Tracks Lockley0003.jpg
  • A Therapod track from Glen Rose Texas.
    Dinosaur Tracks 0002 Glenro.jpg
  • A Therapod track from Glen Rose Texas.
    Dinosaur Tracks 0001 Glenro.jpg
  • Priest and dinosaur tracker Giuseppe Leonardi, who understands some thirty languages, has crossed piranha-infested streams and flooded rivers and robbed three times by bandits searching for tracks.
    scf4373-198_Dinosaur Tracks 0019 Gui...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
  • (1 of 2)We were going to take a photograph of Phil Currie rappeling on this vertically faulted cliff and measuring these dinosaur tracks, but the light wasn't right so we returned the next day but the cliff had collapsed.  SEE
    Dinosaur Tracks Grand0004be.jpg
  • Dinosaur Tracker, Martin Lockley investigates brontosaur trackways near the Purgatoire River in S.E CO.  The parallel tracks, along an ancient lake shoreline of the Morrison Formation are convincing evidence sauropods were social.
    Dinosaur Tracks Lockley0005.jpg
  • At a dinosaur trackway site near Cameron, Arizona, native American Jason Stevens tries unsuccessfully to match the stride of an ancient predator which was as fast as an Olympian athlete's.
    scf4327-128-dinosaur tracks navajo 0...jpg
  • Dinosaur Tracks collected from coal mines in the western United States illustrate the variety of tracks.  The only known death of a human by a dinosaur was when a dinosaur track fell from the ceiling of a coal mine onto a miner.
    Dinosaur Tracks Coal 0001.jpg
  • A Therapod track from Glen Rose Texas.
    scf4327-115-dinosaur tracks 0002 gle...jpg
  • (1 of 2)We were going to take a photograph of Phil Currie rappeling on this vertically faulted cliff and measuring these dinosaur tracks, but the light wasn't right so we returned the next day but the cliff had collapsed.  SEE
    Dinosaur Tracks Grand0003be.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
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie investigates dinosaur tracks discovered by miners from the in Smoky River Coal Company mine near Grand Cache, Alberta.<br />
<br />
(1 of 2)We were going to take a photograph of Phil Currie rappeling on this vertically faulted cliff and measuring these dinosaur tracks, but the light wasn't right so we returned the next day but the cliff had collapsed.  SEE
    Dinosaur Tracks Grand 0002.jpg
  • Priest and dinosaur tracker Giuseppe Leonardi, who understands some thirty languages, has crossed piranha-infested streams and flooded rivers and robbed three times by bandits searching for tracks.
    Dinosaur Tracks 0020 Giusep.jpg
  • Dinosaur Tracks collected from coal mines in the western United States illustrate the variety of tracks.  The only known death of a human by a dinosaur was when a dinosaur track fell from the ceiling of a coal mine onto a miner.
    scf4327-121-dinosaur tracks coal 000...jpg
  • Dinosaur Tracks collected from coal mines in the western United States illustrate the variety of tracks.  The only known death of a human by a dinosaur was when a dinosaur track fell from the ceiling of a coal mine onto a miner.
    Dinosaur Tracks Coal 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
  • Indian guide, Floyd Stevens, uncovers dinosaur tracks in a remote area of the Navajo Reservation near Cameron, Arizona.
    Dinosaur Tracks Navajo 0001.jpg
  • Miners of the Smoky River Coal Company discovered a spectacular dinosaur footprint site during strip-mining operations near the foothills of the Canadian Rockies near Grand Cache, Alberta.
    Dinosaur Tracks Grand 0001.jpg
  • Priest and dinosaur tracker Giuseppe Leonardi, who understands some thirty languages, has crossed piranha-infested streams and flooded rivers and robbed three times by bandits searching for tracks.
    Dinosaur Tracks 0019 Guisep.jpg
  • Paleontologist Jim Farlow's computer-mapped image of a Texas therapod track.
    Dinosaur Track 0039.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
  • Dinosaur Tracker, Martin Lockley investigates brontosaur trackways near the Purgatoire River in S.E CO.  The parallel tracks, along an ancient lake shoreline of the Morrison Formation are convincing evidence sauropods were social.
    Dinosaur Tracks Lockley0002.jpg
  • A Therapod track from Glen Rose Texas.
    scf4327-115_Dinosaur Tracks 0002 Gle...jpg
  • (1 of 2)We were going to take a photograph of Phil Currie rappeling on this vertically faulted cliff and measuring these dinosaur tracks, but the light wasn't right so we returned the next day but the cliff had collapsed.  SEE
    Dinosaur Tracks Grand0007be.jpg
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie investigates xnow-filled dinosaur tracks discovered by miners from the in Smoky River Coal Company mine near Grand Cache, Alberta.
    scf4399-057_Currie Phil 0012 GrandCa...jpg
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie investigates xnow-filled dinosaur tracks discovered by miners from the in Smoky River Coal Company mine near Grand Cache, Alberta.
    Currie Phil 0012 GrandCache.jpg
  • (2 of 2)We returned a day later to find that the cliff of tracks had just collapsed. To our horror, we realized that had we been a few hours earlier Phil and his crew would have been on the cliff measuring tracks when it fell.
    Dinosaur Tracks Grand0006af.jpg
  • (1 of 2)We were going to take a photograph of Phil Currie rappeling on this vertically faulted cliff and measuring these dinosaur tracks, but the light wasn't right so we returned the next day but the cliff had collapsed.  SEE
    scf4373-210_Dinosaur Tracks Grand000...jpg
  • (2 of 2)We returned a day later to find that the cliff of tracks had just collapsed. To our horror, we realized that had we been a few hours earlier Phil and his crew would have been on the cliff measuring tracks when it fell.
    Dinosaur Tracks Grand0005af.jpg
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie investigates snow filled dinosaur tracks discovered by miners from the in Smoky River Coal Company mine near Grand Cache, Alberta.
    Currie Phil 0013 GrandCache.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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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.
    scf4399-055_Coelophysis 0003.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
  • Paleontologist Jack Horner holding a baby maiasaur from a display at Museum of the Rockies as her mother seems to look on.  Jack his in charge of the paleontology department there.<br />
Paleontologist Jack Horner holding a baby maiasaur from a display at Museum of the Rockies as her mother seems to look on.  Jack his in charge of the paleontology department there.
    scf4327-156-horner jack 0007 maiasau...jpg
  • T. Rex was one of the largest-ever meat eating land animals.  The bi-pedal giant grew to some 40 ft (12 meters) weighed up to 7 US tons (6.5 metric tons) and sported teeth that were nearly a foot-long (centimeters) with the root.
    T rex Portrait Side 1.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.
    Ouranosaurus 0003 Ligabua.jpg
  • Dromaeosaur at the Field Station in Dinosaur Provincial Park of the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Alberta, Canada
    Dromaeosaur Tyrrell 0002.jpg
  • This giant dinosaur egg nest was found by a farmer in his field.  Paleontologist Chai Zhongqing of the Institute of Cultural Relics excavates the matrix around the specimen which contains at least 26 eggs.
    Dino Egg Nest China 0001.jpg
  • Despite Sir Richard Owen's handicap of only having fragmentary evidence of dinosaurs he envisioned them scaled up as giant lizards and had a dinosaur park at the Crystal Palace constructed.
    scf4327-070-crystal palace dinos 000...jpg
  • An Ornithomimus speci men from Dinosaur Provincial Park in Alberta Canada.  When the dinosaur die their neck is pulled back by neck tendons drying in the sun.
    scf4399-094_Ornithomimus 0001.jpg
  • Mark Norell slowly picks at a prehistoric nest of Dromaeosaur eggs in Ukhaa Tolgod, Gobi Desert.
    scf4373-321_Norell Mark Eggs.jpg
  • T. Rex was one of the largest-ever meat eating land animals.  The bi-pedal giant grew to some 40 ft (12 meters) weighed up to 7 US tons (6.5 metric tons) and small two-fingered hands that were actually surprisingly strong.
    scf4327-214-t rex am mus set up.jpg
  • Professor Edward Drinker Cope, from Philadelphia, PA. one of the most successful paleontologists in the world died in 1897.
    scf4327-063_Cope 0001 Edward portrai...jpg
  • The Berlin specimen of Archaeopteryx is one of the most famous fossils in the world.  Seemingly half dinosaur and half bird, it has been called a fossil caught in the act of evolution.
    scf4327-032-archaeopteryx 0002.jpg
  • A 129-foot-tall (39 m) T.rex hot-air balloon, owned by Thunder and Colt Balloons, glides over Dinosaur Provincial Park.
    T rex Balloon 0003.jpg
  • Famous Paleontologist who was responsible for giving dinasaurs their name. Owen proposed the name "Dinosauria" from the Greek which means, roughly, "fearfully great lizard."
    Owen Sir Richard 0001.jpg
  • At Stan Winston Studios outside L.A. in Van Nuys, CA., the dinosaurs, like this Dilophosaurus for Steven Spielberg's action epic, Jurassic Park are created by a Winston animator.
    Jurassic Park 0013.jpg
  • A juvenile Velociraptor attacked a Protoceratops, which bit down of the predator's right hand with its beak-like jaws, locking both in a death grip.  The Velociraptor's hind claw is embedded in the Protoceratops' belly.
    Fighting Dinosaurs 0002.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
  • 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 Mus Horiz.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
  • "Sue," the largest and most complete tyrannosaur ever found, with Pete (left) and brother, Neal Larson.  Sue was named after her discoverer, Sue Hendrickson as per the policy of their company, the Black Hills Institute.
    scf4399-012.jpg
  • Dead End Sign in the town of Dinosaur, Colorado.
    Pop Culture 0009a Dino CO.jpg
  • From 1909-1913 in excess of 250 tons of fossil material, including Brachiosaurus, was transported over four-day marches on the heads + backs of ports from Tendaguru Africa to the port of Lindi 50 miles (80 k) away.
    Brachiosaurus 0007.jpg
  • This brontosaur sculpture at Dinosaur Gardens Prehistoric Zoo outside Alpena, Michigan has a christian shrine within its belly.  The owner of the park, who made the sculptures also made a hero-sized sculpture of Jesus at the entrance.  At first he made the hands too big so he dynamited them off and replaced them.
    scf4373-039_Alpena Michigan 1.jpg
  • Both twigs mounted are mounted on the heads of pins.  On the right is a juniper from Papua New Guinea the closest living relative to the 74 million-year-old relative on the right rescued from ironstone.  Left in the rain it will rust.
    scf4327-202-plants 0002 which will r...jpg
  • Famous Jurassic Park Ride at Universal Studio's Amusement Park in Southern California.  Jurassic Park was one of the largest grossing movies ever made, directed by Steven Spielberg.<br />
Famous Jurassic Park Ride at Universal Studio's Amusement Park in Southern California.  Jurassic Park was one of the largest grossing movies ever made, directed by Steven Spielberg.<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.
    scf4327-177-jurassic park ride 0001.jpg
  • I found professor Cope in a box last used by Herbach and Rademan for electrical parts and his skull wrapped in the want ads of the Philadelphia Enquirer.
    scf4327-066-cope 0005 cope in box.jpg
  • T. Rex was one of the largest-ever meat eating land animals.  The bi-pedal giant grew to some 40 ft (12 meters) weighed up to 7 US tons (6.5 metric tons) and small two-fingered hands that were actually surprisingly strong.
    T rex Am Mus Set up.jpg
  • Mesozoic bonehead with modern head-banger gear.
    Pachycephalosaurus 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
  • John Knoebber at Yosemite National Park with Edward Drinker Cope's skull in Cardboard box.
    Cope 0018A with Knoebber.jpg
  • Paleontologist, Author Bob Bakker.
    Bakker Bob 0001-2.jpg
  • As Bob Bakker's warm-blooded theory heated up and gathered the support of the scientific community, museums around the world responded by mounting their dinosaurs in more active poses.
    Bakker Bob 0014 T rex-2.jpg
  • Although Cope had named Coelophysis, a dinosaur discovered near Ghost Ranch by his collector David Baldwin in 1881, he had never been there himself until we made a pilgrimage with him in 1992.
    Cope 0006 Ghost Ranch.jpg
  • Dave Thomas drives his 33-foot-long (10M) allosaurus to California past the Zia Pueblo Reservation in Arizona.
    Allosaurus on Pickup 0002.jpg
  • Dave Thomas drives his 33-foot-long (10M) allosaurus to California past the Zia Pueblo Reservation in Arizona.
    Allosaurus on Pickup 0001.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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • T. Rex robotic dinosaur designed by the Japanese Company  Kokoro.
    scf4373-380_T rex Model Kokoro 0001.jpg
  • A small child wears a Trex costume outside the Cincinatti Museum Center.
    scf4373-352_Pop Culture 0010a OhioMu...jpg
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