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  • Dromaeosaur at the Field Station in Dinosaur Provincial Park of the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Alberta, Canada
    Dromaeosaur Tyrrell 0002.jpg
  • Dromaeosaur at the Field Station in Dinosaur Provincial Park of the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Alberta, Canada
    Dromaeosaur Tyrrell 0001.jpg
  • Dromaeosaur at the Field Station in Dinosaur Provincial Park of the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Alberta, Canada
    scf4399-077_Dromaeosaur Tyrrell 0003.jpg
  • Dromaeosaur at the Field Station in Dinosaur Provincial Park of the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Alberta, Canada
    Dromaeosaur Tyrrell 0003.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
  • 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.
    scf4327-195-ornithomimus 0001.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
  • 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.
    Ornithomimus 0001.jpg
  • Kevin Aulenback probes the badlands, behind the The Royal Tyrrell Museum where he works, for piece of ironstone encasing ancient plant life.  He releases them by slowly disolving the matrix with an acid solution.
    Plants 0001 Aulenback Kevin.jpg
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie's excavates near Dinosaur Provincial Park, a site previously discovered in the early 1900's by Barnum Brown of the American Museum of Natural History that contained Albertasaurs.  Circa 1999
    Currie Phil 0015 Barnham.jpg
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie's excavates near Dinosaur Provincial Park, a site previously discovered in the early 1900's by Barnum Brown of the American Museum of Natural History that contained Albertasaurs.  Circa 1999
    scf4399-058_Currie Phil 0017 Barnham.jpg
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie's excavates at Dinosaur Provincial Park, a site previously discovered in the early 1900's by Barnum Brown of the American Museum of Natural History that contained Albertasaurs.
    Dinosaur ProvincialPark0001.jpg
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie's excavates near Dinosaur Provincial Park, a site previously discovered in the early 1900's by Barnum Brown of the American Museum of Natural History that contained Albertasaurs.  Circa 1999
    Currie Phil 0017 Barnham.jpg
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie's excavates near Dinosaur Provincial Park, a site previously discovered in the early 1900's by Barnum Brown of the American Museum of Natural History that contained Albertasaurs.  Circa 1999
    Currie Phil 0016 Barnham.jpg
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie's excavates near Dinosaur Provincial Park, a site previously discovered in the early 1900's by Barnum Brown of the American Museum of Natural History that contained Albertasaurs.  Circa 1999
    Currie Phil 0014 Barnham.jpg
  • Dinosaur tooth found by the author, Louie Psihoyos at Dinosaur Provincial Park.
    Dinosaur teeth 0001ProvPark.jpg
  • Dinosaur tooth found by the author, Louie Psihoyos at Dinosaur Provincial Park.
    Dinosaur Teeth 0001b.jpg
  • While hanging from a rope, Hans Larsson excavates a toe bone of a centrosaur.
    scf4373-186_Dinosaur ProvincialPark0...jpg
  • Dinosaur tooth found by the author, Louie Psihoyos at Dinosaur Provincial Park.
    Dinosaur Teeth 0001a.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
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie's excavates at Dinosaur Provincial Park, a protected reserve of one of the most abundant resources of Cretaceous dinosaurs in the world.  This site contains Centrosaurs.
    Dinosaur ProvincialPark0007.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 on Bluff.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
  • While hanging from a rope, Hans Larsson excavates a toe bone of a centrosaur.
    Dinosaur ProvincialPark0009.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
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie's excavates at Dinosaur Provincial Park, a protected reserve of one of the most abundant resources of Cretaceous dinosaurs in the world.  This site contains Centrosaurs.
    Dinosaur ProvincialPark0004.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
  • While hanging from a rope, Hans Larsson excavates a toe bone of a centrosaur.
    Dinosaur ProvincialPark0006.jpg
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie's excavates at Dinosaur Provincial Park, a protected reserve of one of the most abundant resources of Cretaceous dinosaurs in the world.  This site contains Centrosaurs.
    Dinosaur ProvincialPark0005.jpg
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie's excavates at Dinosaur Provincial Park, a protected reserve of one of the most abundant resources of Cretaceous dinosaurs in the world.  This site contains Centrosaurs.
    Dinosaur ProvincialPark0003.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
  • Paleontologist Phil Currie's excavates at Dinosaur Provincial Park, a protected reserve of one of the most abundant resources of Cretaceous dinosaurs in the world.  This site contains Centrosaurs.
    Dinosaur ProvincialPark0002.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.
    Plants 0002 Which will Rust.jpg
  • Triceratops,  which means "three-horned face," was common in the latest part of the Cretaceous in western North America.  It was a plant eater and grew to 30 ft (9 meters) and weighed up to 6 US tons (5.4 metric tons).
    Triceratops 0003 Tyrrell.jpg
  • Triceratops,  which means "three-horned face," was common in the latest part of the Cretaceous in western North America.  It was a plant eater and grew to 30 ft (9 meters) and weighed up to 6 US tons (5.4 metric tons).
    scf4399-104_Triceratops 0003 Tyrrell.jpg
  • Triceratops, which means "three-horned face" was common in the latest part of the Cretaceous in western North America.  It was a plant eater and grew to 30 ft (9 m) and weighed up to 6 US tons (5.4 metric tons).
    Triceratops 0001 Tyrrell.jpg
  • Triceratops,  which means "three-horned face," was common in the latest part of the Cretaceous in western North America.  It was a plant eater and grew to 30 ft (9 meters) and weighed up to 6 US tons (5.4 metric tons).
    Triceratops 0002 Tyrrell.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
  • 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
  • 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.
    Currie Dino Egg China 0008.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.
    Currie Dino Egg China 0004.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.
    Currie Dino Egg China 0003.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 with paleontologist Charlie Magovern.
    Currie Dino Egg China 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 that was right behind someone's home.
    Currie Dino Egg China 0005.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.
    scf4373-135_Currie Dino Egg China 00...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.
    Currie Dino Egg China 0002.jpg
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