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  • Jack McIntosh, the leading expert on sauropods kisses the  Carnegie Museum of Natural History's Apatosaurus.  When Jack was a child this dinosaur was headless and Jack returned years later after finding its head.
    scf4373-093_Brontosaurus 0002kissing.jpg
  • Jack McIntosh, the leading expert on sauropods, admires the  Carnegie Museum of Natural History's Apatosaurus.  This forty-ton vegetarian is over 77 feet (23 meters) long and is the longest mounted dinosaur in the world.
    Brontosaurus 0004 McIntosh.jpg
  • Jack McIntosh, the leading expert on sauropods, admires the  Carnegie Museum of Natural History's Apatosaurus.  This forty-ton vegetarian is over 77 feet (23 meters) long and is the longest mounted dinosaur in the world.
    Brontosaurus 0001McIntosh.jpg
  • Jack McIntosh, the leading expert on sauropods kisses the  Carnegie Museum of Natural History's Apatosaurus.  When Jack was a child this dinosaur was headless and Jack returned years later after finding its head.
    Brontosaurus 0002kissing.jpg
  • Mark Norell, assistant curator (left) of the American Museum of Natural History, removes a Camarasaurus head from an Apatosaurus (Brontosaurus) mount in 1991, correcting a century-old error.
    Brontosaurus 0010 New Head.jpg
  • This forty-ton vegetarian, Apatosaurus louisae, at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History is named after Andrew Carnegie's wife, is over seventy-seven feet 23 melong and is the longest mounted dinosaur in the world.
    Apatosaurus 0001.jpg
  • This forty-ton vegetarian, Apatosaurus louisae, at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History is named after Andrew Carnegie's wife, is over seventy-seven feet 23 melong and is the longest mounted dinosaur in the world.
    scf4327-030_Apatosaurus 0001.jpg
  • This forty-ton vegetarian, Apatosaurus louisae, at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History and named after Andrew Carnegie's wife, is over seventy-seven feet (23 meters) long and is the longest mounted dinosaur in the world.
    scf4327-046_Brontosaurus 0003 Human ...jpg
  • Original Print from Marsh drawing of Brontosaurus.
    Brontosaurus Drawing Marsh.jpg
  • This forty-ton vegetarian, Apatosaurus louisae, at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History is named after Andrew Carnegie's wife, is over seventy-seven feet 23 melong and is the longest mounted dinosaur in the world.
    Apatosaurus 0002.jpg
  • Mark Norell, assistant curator (left) of the American Museum of Natural History, removes a Camarasaurus head from an Apatosaurus (Brontosaurus) mount in 1991, correcting a century-old error.
    Brontosaurus 0009 New Head.jpg
  • This forty-ton vegetarian, Apatosaurus louisae, at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History and named after Andrew Carnegie's wife, is over seventy-seven feet (23 meters) long and is the longest mounted dinosaur in the world.
    Brontosaurus 0003 Human sk.jpg
  • This forty-ton vegetarian, Apatosaurus louisae, at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History and named after Andrew Carnegie's wife, is over seventy-seven feet (23 meters) long and is the longest mounted dinosaur in the world.
    scf4327-046-brontosaurus 0003 human ...jpg
  • This forty-ton vegetarian, Apatosaurus louisae, at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History is named after Andrew Carnegie's wife, is over seventy-seven feet 23 melong and is the longest mounted dinosaur in the world.
    scf4327-030-apatosaurus 0001.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
  • A school boy on a class tour stands proud with a sauropod femur on display at the Ulan Bator State Museum in Mongolia.<br />
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.
    Sauropod bone UBBOY 0002.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.
    Sauropod bone UBBOY 0001.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
  • Amargasaurus, a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires was discovered by paleontologist, Guillermo Rougier.
    Amargasaurus 0008 Discovere.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
  • 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
  • At the Zigong Dinosaur Mseum in the  Sichuan Province, chinese paleontologist Dong Zhiming studies the neck of a twenty-meter-long (65.67 ft) Omeisaurus from a bosun's chair.
    Omeisaurus DongZhiming 0002.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
  • 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
  • Discoverer of Amargasaurus, Guillermo Rougier, a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.
    Amargasaurus 0004 Rougier.jpg
  • Jose Bonaparte with Amargasaurus, a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.  Discoverer was Guillermo Rougier.
    Amargasaurus 0003 Jose Bo.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
  • 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
  • Amargasaurus, a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires was discovered by paleontologist, Guillermo Rougier.
    scf4373-048_Amargasaurus 0007 Discov...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
  • Jose Bonaparte with Amargasaurus, a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.  Discoverer was Guillermo Rougier.
    scf4399-034_Amargasaurus 0003 Jose B...jpg
  • Yangchuanosaurs is the big therapod carnivore on right.  Omeisaurus Fuxinsis is the sauropod (brontosaur) in the foreground.
    Dino Chinese Museum 0001.jpg
  • At the Museum of La Plata University in Argentina, paleontologist Fernando E. Novas stands next to a femur of Antarctosaurus, a giant titanosaur sauropod of the Late Cretaceous which may have weighed up to fifty tons.
    scf4399-039_Argentinasaurus femurlig...jpg
  • At the Museum of La Plata University in Argentina, paleontologist Fernando E. Novas stands next to a femur of Antarctosaurus, a giant titanosaur sauropod of the Late Cretaceous which may have weighed up to fifty tons.
    Argentinasaurus femurlight.jpg
  • At the Museum of La Plata University in Argentina, paleontologist Fernando E. Novas stands next to a femur of Antarctosaurus, a giant titanosaur sauropod of the Late Cretaceous which may have weighed up to fifty tons.
    Argentinasaurus femur 1.jpg
  • Jose Bonaparte with Carnotaurus (left) and Amargasaurus (right), a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires.
    Bonaparte Jose 0008.tif_.jpg
  • Amargasaurus, a "jibbed" sauropod from the Argentina at the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Buenos Aires was discovered by paleontologist, Guillermo Rougier.
    Amargasaurus 0007 Discovere.jpg
  • Yangchuanosaurs is the big therapod carnivore on right.  Omeisaurus Fuxinsis is the sauropod (brontosaur) in the foreground.
    Dino Chinese Museum 0001-2.jpg
  • A Nemegtosaurus Skull in the Mongolian State Museum in Ulan Bator.
    scf4399-093_Nemegtosaurus 0001 Skull.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.
    scf4399-084)Jensen Jim 0001.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.
    scf4327-163-jensen jim 0001.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 0001.jpg
  • The Brontosaurus at the American Museum of Natural History rests on a real trackway from Texas.
    scf4373-096_Brontosaurus 0008 Americ...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
  • A Seismosaurus site in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Part of the upper Morrison Formation dating 154 million years.  These gastroliths were found near the rib cage and are believed to have aided in digestion much like birds todays.
    scf4373-227_Gastroliths 0001.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 Brontosaurus at the American Museum of Natural is cleaned.
    scf4399-049_Brontosaurus 0007 Americ...jpg
  • A Nemegtosaurus Skull in the Mongolian State Museum in Ulan Bator.
    scf4327-193-nemegtosaurus 0001 skull.jpg
  • Dinoaurs mounted for St. Paul Museum of Science.
    scf4399-010.jpg
  • Dinoaurs mounted for St. Paul Museum of Science.
    scf4399-010-St Paul Museum 0001.jpg
  • Near the rib cage of Seismosaurus, gillette's crew found about 240 stomach stones (gastroliths), enough to fill a 10-quart (10liter) bucket.  As with birds, the stomach stones may have aided a dinosaur's digestion.
    scf4373-228_Gastroliths Stomach Ston...jpg
  • At Stan Winston Studios outside L.A. in Van Nuys, CA., the dinosaurs, like this Brachiosaurus for Steven Spielberg's action epic, Jurassic Park were created.  Stan is one of Hollywoods most innovative character creators.
    Jurassic Park 0016.jpg
  • Jim Farlow, paleontologist with Indiana Univ. uses a displacement theory developed by R. McNeill Alexander of the Univ. of Leeds in England to calculate the weight of Mamenchisaurus at about twenty-three tons.
    Farlow Jim Mamenchisaurus.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
  • A Seismosaurus site in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Part of the upper Morrison Formation dating 154 million years.  The excavation took seven years due to the concrete-like consistency of the surrounding rock.
    Seismosaurus Site NM 0002.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
  • A popular Road-side attraction near Cabazon, California just west of Los Angeles, off Interstate 10.
    Pop Culture 0012 Cabazon C.jpg
  • Near the rib cage of Seismosaurus, gillette's crew found about 240 stomach stones (gastroliths), enough to fill a 10-quart (10liter) bucket.  As with birds, the stomach stones may have aided a dinosaur's digestion.
    Gastroliths Stomach Stones.jpg
  • Brachiosaurus discovered in Tendagura, then called German East Africa, was transported back on the heads of natives 50 miles away to the port town of Lindi on the Indian Ocean.
    Brachiosaurus 0008.jpg
  • At the Zigong Dinosaur Mseum in the  Sichuan Province, chinese paleontologist Dong Zhiming studies the neck of a twenty-meter-long (65.67 ft) Omeisaurus from a bosun's chair.
    Omeisaurus China.jpg
  • The largest mounted dinosaur in the world, Brachiosaurus, a 135-million-year-old vegetarian from Tendagura, now resides at the Natural History Museum of Humboldt University in Berlin.
    Brachiosaurus 0002 Berlin.jpg
  • Louie Psihoyos (left) with Skull of Edward Drinker Cope author of Hunting Dinosaurs and John Knoebber.
    Psihoyos Louie 0001Knoebber.jpg
  • A Seismosaurus site in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Part of the upper Morrison Formation dating 154 million years.  The excavation took seven years due to the concrete-like consistency of the surrounding rock.
    Seismosaurus Site NM 0001.jpg
  • A Nemegtosaurus Skull in the Mongolian State Museum in Ulan Bator.
    Nemegtosaurus 0001 Skull.jpg
  • Camarasaur lower tooth with root from Nail Quarry, Wyoming at Como Bluff Wyoming.  Victim was probably killed by an Allosaur.  Concretion is a mineral lump and dark part of tooth shows wear from chewing.
    dinosaur teeth Camarasaur.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.
    scf4327-164-jensen jim 0002.jpg
  • A Seismosaurus site in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Part of the upper Morrison Formation dating 154 million years.  These gastroliths were found near the rib cage and are believed to have aided in digestion much like birds todays.
    scf4327-146-gastroliths 0001.jpg
  • At Stan Winston Studios outside L.A. in Van Nuys, CA., the dinosaurs, like this Brachiosaurus for Steven Spielberg's action epic, Jurassic Park were created.  Stan is one of Hollywoods most innovative character creators.
    Jurassic Park 0011.jpg
  • The largest mounted dinosaur in the world, Brachiosaurus, a 135-million-year-old vegetarian from Tendagura, now resides at the Natural History Museum of Humboldt University in Berlin.
    Brachiosaurus 0001 Berlin.jpg
  • The Brontosaurus at the American Museum of Natural is cleaned.
    Brontosaurus 0007 American.jpg
  • At Stan Winston Studios outside L.A. in Van Nuys, CA., the dinosaurs, like this Brachiosaurus for Steven Spielberg's action epic, Jurassic Park were created.  Stan is one of Hollywoods most innovative character creators.
    Jurassic Park 0014.jpg
  • A Seismosaurus site in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Part of the upper Morrison Formation dating 154 million years.  These gastroliths were found near the rib cage and are believed to have aided in digestion much like birds todays.
    Gastroliths 0001.jpg
  • Louie Psihoyos (left) with Skull of Edward Drinker Cope author of Hunting Dinosaurs and John Knoebber.
    scf4327-606psihoyos louie 0001knoebb...jpg
  • Author of Hunting Dinosaurs, Louie Psihoyos holds up a fiberglass cast of an Ultrasaurus femur near Provo Utah.
    Psihoyos Louie 0005 Ultra.jpg
  • Louie Psihoyos, author of Hunting Dinosaurs with assistant, John Knoebber outside a rock shop near the Petrified Forest National Park in Arizona.
    Psihoyos Louie 0004Knoebber.jpg
  • The Brontosaurus at the American Museum of Natural History rests on a real trackway from Texas.
    Brontosaurus 0008 American.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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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 Lockley0001.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
  • 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
  • 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
  • Dinosaur Tracker, Martin Lockley crouches in the hole of giant sauropod footprint as he prepares to make a cast.
    Dinosaur Tracks Lockley0004.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
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