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  • Eoraptor Skull being prepared at the Field Museum in Chicago.
    scf4432-003.jpg
  • Eoraptor Skull being prepared at the Field Museum in Chicago.
    Eoraptor 0003.jpg
  • Macroelongatoolithus xixiaensis is the largest known dinosaur egg.  Found in the Xixia Basin in China it is thought to be a therizinosaur.  Circa 1995
    scf4327-084-dino egg baby louie 0004.jpg
  • Macroelongatoolithus xixiaensis is the largest known dinosaur egg.  Found in the Xixia Basin in China it is thought to be a therizinosaur.  Circa 1995
    Dino Egg Baby Louie 0004.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
  • Eoraptor Skull being prepared at the Field Museum in Chicago.
    Eoraptor 0002.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
  • Eoraptor Skull being prepared at the Field Museum in Chicago.
    scf4327-139-eoraptor 0001.jpg
  • Eoraptor Skull being prepared at the Field Museum in Chicago.
    Eoraptor 0001.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
  • British Museum paleontologists in London revamp their dinosaur collection.
    scf4327-045-british museum.jpg
  • Dragon boats, a traditional Chinese form of water transportation, prepare for races on the Jilong River.  Taipei 101 looms in the background.
    taipei0021 dragon boats.jpg
  • At the Breijos Pearl Farm on Manihi, grafters prepare oysters to produce cultured pearls.
    Tahiti Black Pearls 0038.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
  • The T.rex called Sue was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute.  Founders Pete (left) brother Neal Larson (Center) and Bob Farrar (right).
    scf4373-388_T rex Sue 3 Black Hills ...jpg
  • Silhouette of the Tyrannosaurus called Stan.   This "tyrant lizard king," was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute and named after the discoveror, Stan Sacrison.
    scf4327-222-t-rex-pete-larson-4b-whi...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
  • The T.rex called Sue was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute.  Founders Pete (left) brother Neal Larson (Center) and Bob Farrar (right).
    T rex Sue 3 Black Hills pr.jpg
  • Silhouette of the Tyrannosaurus called Stan.   This "tyrant lizard king," was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute and named after the discoveror, Stan Sacrison.
    T rex Pete Larson 4b white.jpg
  • Silhouette of the Tyrannosaurus called Stan.   This "tyrant lizard king," was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute and named after the discoveror, Stan Sacrison.
    T rex Pete Larson 4a.jpg
  • Terry Manning a fossil dealer and 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.
    Dino Egg embryo w text.jpg
  • Terry Manning a fossil dealer and 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.
    Dino Egg embryo bl bkgrou.jpg
  • Terry Manning a fossil dealer and 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.
    Dino Egg embryo England.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
  • 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
  • The T.rex called Sue was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute.  Founders Pete (left) brother Neal Larson (Center) and Bob Farrar (right).
    scf4327-229-t rex sue 3 black hills ...jpg
  • Silhouette of the Tyrannosaurus called Stan.   This "tyrant lizard king," was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute and named after the discoveror, Stan Sacrison.
    T rex Pete Larson 4.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
  • 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
  • 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.<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 />
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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • Dinosaur Tracker, Martin Lockley crouches in the hole of giant sauropod footprint as he prepares to make a cast.
    Dinosaur Tracks Lockley0004.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
  • The T.rex called Sue was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute and by their policy named after the discoveror, Sue Hendrcikson, an amateur paleontologist.
    T rex Sue 4 w bandages.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
  • 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
  • A collection of Canadian and Chinese dinosaurs discovered over five years of expeditions, is prepared for a traveling show under the direction of Paleontologist Phil Currie.
    Currie Phil 0010 ExTerra.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 in a nest by preparator Martin Vince of the U. of Tucuman in Argentina.
    Mussaurus 0004 Skull.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
  • A thereizinosaur embryo how it would have appeared in its egg.  By artist Brian Cooley.  Terry Manning a fossil dealer and paleontologist from Leicester, England patiently prepared the real fossilized embryos with a diluted acid solution..
    scf4327-106_Dino Eggs Model 0002.jpg
  • A collection of Canadian and Chinese dinosaurs discovered over five years of expeditions, is prepared for a traveling show.  Ex Terra Dinosaur Workshop, Drumheller, Alberta.
    scf4356-442_Dinosaur wkshop XT 0003.jpg
  • The tooth and root of the T.rex called Sue.  Terry Wentz, Sue's preparator said, "After sixty-five million years you can still cut yourself on a T.rex tooth."  T. rex had serrated edges on the fore and aft cutting edges of their teeth.
    scf4327-231-t rex tooth 0003 blackhi...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.
    scf4327-206-quarry map 0001 clevelan...jpg
  • A thereizinosaur embryo how it would have appeared in its egg.  By artist Brian Cooley.  Terry Manning a fossil dealer and paleontologist from Leicester, England patiently prepared the real fossilized embryos with a diluted acid solution..
    scf4327-106-dino eggs model 0002.jpg
  • A collection of Canadian and Chinese dinosaurs discovered over five years of expeditions, is prepared for a traveling show under the direction of Paleontologist Phil Currie.
    scf4327-073-currie phil 0010 exterra.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
  • The tooth and root of the T.rex called Sue.  Terry Wentz, Sue's preparator said, "After sixty-five million years you can still cut yourself on a T.rex tooth."  T. rex had serrated edges on the fore and aft cutting edges of their teeth.
    T rex Tooth 0003 BlackHills.jpg
  • The T.rex called Sue was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute.  Founders Pete (left) brother Neal Larson (Center) and Bob Farrar (right).<br />
Pete Larson consols and gets consoled by family and Black Hills Institute members as "Sue" was seized by Federal troops.
    T rex Sue 2 Black Hills.jpg
  • T. Rex, "tyrant lizard king," was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute and named after the discoveror, Stan Sacrison.  Pete Larson of the Black Hills Institute is the figure in silhouette.
    T rex Pete Larson 6.jpg
  • T. Rex, "tyrant lizard king," was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute and named after the discoveror, Stan Sacrison.  Shown with Black Hills Institute founder and author Pete Larson.
    T rex Pete Larson 3.jpg
  • T. Rex, "tyrant lizard king," was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute and named after the discoveror, Stan Sacrison.  Shown with Black Hills Institute founder and author Pete Larson.
    T rex Pete Larson 2.jpg
  • T. Rex, "tyrant lizard king," was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute and named after the discoveror, Stan Sacrison.  Shown with Black Hills Institute founder and author Pete Larson
    T rex Pete Larson 1.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
  • Canadian Paleontologist Phil Currie at the Ex Terra workshop.  A collection of Canadian and Chinese dinosaurs discovered over five years of expeditions, is prepared for a traveling show.
    Dinosaur wkshop XT NOlights.jpg
  • Canadian Paleontologist Phil Currie at the Ex Terra workshop.  A collection of Canadian and Chinese dinosaurs discovered over five years of expeditions, is prepared for a traveling show.
    Dinosaur wkshop XT NOlights-2.jpg
  • A collection of Canadian and Chinese dinosaurs discovered over five years of expeditions, is prepared for a traveling show.
    Dinosaur wkshop XT Lights.jpg
  • Canadian Paleontologist Phil Currie at the Ex Terra workshop.  A collection of Canadian and Chinese dinosaurs discovered over five years of expeditions, is prepared for a traveling show.
    Currie Phil 0009 ExTerra.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 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 0003 Argentian.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
  • T. Rex, "tyrant lizard king," was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute and named after the discoveror, Stan Sacrison.  Shown with Black Hills Institute founder and author Pete Larson
    scf4327-220-t rex pete larson 1.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 collection of Canadian and Chinese dinosaurs discovered over five years of expeditions, is prepared for a traveling show.  Ex Terra Dinosaur Workshop, Drumheller, Alberta.
    scf4327-129-dinosaur wkshop xt 0003.jpg
  • A thereizinosaur embryo how it would have appeared in its egg.  By artist Brian Cooley.  Terry Manning a fossil dealer and paleontologist from Leicester, England patiently prepared the real fossilized embryos with a diluted acid solution..
    scf4327-106.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
  • Pete Larson consols and gets consoled by family and Black Hills Institute members as "Sue" was seized by Federal troops.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
The T.rex called Sue was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute and by their policy named after the discoveror, Sue Hendrcikson, an amateur paleontologist.  (Pete Larson left, Terry Wentz right)
    T rex Sue 6 confiscation.jpg
  • T. Rex, "tyrant lizard king," was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute and named after the discoveror, Stan Sacrison.  Shown with Black Hills Institute founder and author Pete Larson
    T rex Pete Larson 5.jpg
  • T. Rex, "tyrant lizard king," was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute and named after the discoveror, Stan Sacrison.  Larson and company raising Stan on Main Street, Hill City, South Dakota.
    T rex 0007 Black Hills Inst.jpg
  • A collection of Canadian and Chinese dinosaurs discovered over five years of expeditions, is prepared for a traveling show.  Ex Terra Dinosaur Workshop, Drumheller, Alberta.
    Dinosaur wkshop XT 0003.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
  • T. Rex, "tyrant lizard king," was excavated and prepared by the Black Hills Institute and named after the discoveror, Stan Sacrison.  Shown with Black Hills Institute founder and author Pete Larson
    scf4327-220_T rex Pete Larson 1.jpg
  • A thereizinosaur embryo how it would have appeared in its egg.  By artist Brian Cooley.  Terry Manning a fossil dealer and paleontologist from Leicester, England patiently prepared the real fossilized embryos with a diluted acid solution..
    Dino Eggs Model 0002.jpg
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