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Votes:0 DinoDraw Game How to Play Create your own dinosaur park. Great for kids learning to use the mouse Requires (uses Macromedia Flash 4.0 ) Read More Go to Site
Votes:0 Welcome to G'day! Congratulations on surviving the trek to the outpost. A lot have tried to make it here, but did not survive as you can tell by the number on the counter. Blasted carnivores! Here at the outpost, I invite you to stroll around before you head back into dinosaur country. Oh, and while you are here, watch your heads. I have had complaints of pteranadon kamikazi dives. Or if you come across a pack of vicious raptors (they're always jumping the gate), use deadly force-- if you don't, they will. Enjoy your stay-- and one more thing: don't feed the animals. Dino-Guide Here are some paths to the different sections of the outpost: Visit the Outpost Control Room to learn more about dinosaurs. Climb into one of my High Hide Viewing Areas to take a glimpse at these awesome beasts (Ple Read More Go to Site
Votes:0 Photographs From Smithsonian Exhibits The Dinosaur Hall National Museum of Natural History The Dinosaur Hall at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC ==Smithsonian photo by Chip Clark. ---------- The bones of a fierce looking Allosaurus dinosaur. Photographed on display at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History ==Smithsonian Photo by Dane A. Penland ---------- Diplodocus, the tall, long-neck skeleton from a sauropod dinosaur (plant-eater), which lived about 135 million years ago. From the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History. Smithsonian Photo by Dane A. Penland. ---------- Armored dinosaur Stegosaurus, a plant-eater of the late Jurassic Period, about 135 million years ago. As displayed in the Smithsonian Institution's National Mus Read More Go to Site
Votes:0 Most children's books about fossils are written by non-scientists, concentrate only on dinosaurs, and frequently contain errors, I've found in the years since I first started buying them for my daughter Allison. They also can be quite expensive. I put together this little booklet to go with talks about fossils that I give to schools. I have used it with children from age 4 to 8 with good results. I send a copy home with each of the children so that they can remember a little bit about what I've said. It is a basic introduction to paleontology for kids who really know nothing about it yet; so if you have a real paleophile at home, you probably will find that she is already beyond this level. You may view and print a copy for your own use entirely free. If you are a teacher, or someone who a Read More Go to Site
Votes:0 Scientists can figure out what a dinosaur ate by looking closely at its teeth. Dinosaurs that ate meat had sharp, pointed teeth needed to tear their food apart. Those with blunt teeth fed mostly on plants. All dinosaurs laid eggs. The covered them with soil. The eggs stayed warm until they cracked and the babies crawled out. The largest eggs were almost a foot and a half long. After the eggs hatched, it appears that some babies stayed in the nest until they were three feet long. And some grew to full size by the age of eight. When the first dinosaur fossils were found 170 years ago, some people did not believe that such giant creatures ever existed. Dinosaurs were special kinds of reptiles. It is possible that emus, ostriches, and even birds that fly are their distant cousins. Pteranodons, Read More Go to Site
Votes:0 PaleoBase Macrofossils 1.0: Image Gallery This gallery of PalaeoVision images from the invertebrate groups included in the PaleoBase Macrofossils 1.0 Database gives some idea of the scope and quality of the included illustrations. However, these are only thumbnail representations of the images. The images included in the databare are all high-resolution (600 dpi) representations of fossil specimens from the collections of The Natural History Museum (London) - including illustrations of many type specimens . The database software provides users with 10 levels of magnification they can use to "zoom in" on features of particular interest. The entire space of the user's computer monitor can be used to view these images and image records can be displayed in multiple windows, facilitat Read More Go to Site
Votes:0 PALYNOLOGY is the branch of science dealing with microscopic, decay-resistant remains of certain plants and animals. It has many applications including archaeological palynology , Quaternary palynology , and stratigraphic palynology . Olneya tesota Lee Sola REGULAR FEATURES Definitions & Illustrations Pollen Grain of the Month Web Site of the Month Kid's Palynology (K-3) PALYNOLOGY AT UofAZ History Instruction Research Personnel LINKS TO WORLD ORGANIZATIONS SERVICES Palynology Sites & People Palynology Education Scientific Journals Governmental Agencies Internet Tools Internet Pollen Images IFPS AASP ALPP APLE APLF A P P T M S CAP C I M P CPS L P P NAPD Pollen Diagrams Palynology References Useful Paly Products Palynology Consultants AASP Student Scholarships AASP Downloads ~ + ~ Maintaine Read More Go to Site
Votes:0 Quick Links Event Planning & Rentals Gallery Sneak Peek Jobs Membership Podcasts ROM Images ROM Photo Diary ROMkids ROMbus ROMtravel ROMwalk School Visits Tours & Groups Travelling Exhibitions Volunteers & Interns Webcam Search Tickets & Hours | E-Newsletter | FAQs | Contact Us | Site Map | RSS Feeds | FranÇais Home Plan Your Visit Exhibitions & Galleries Collections & Research Programs Schools & Kids School Visits Travelling Education Kits Travelling Starlab ROMkids Online Activities Support the ROM About the ROM ROM Leadership Services & Rentals Institute for Contemporary Culture Online Activities: Fossils Return to Main Fossil Matching Game Fossils are our only clues to life in the past. They help us learn about evolution - how living things have changed through time. Fossils are like a Read More Go to Site
Votes:0 Kids' Habitat SDNHM Home Visitor Information What Are Fossils? Where Are Fossils? Where to Look for Fossils How to Look for Fossils Discover What You Have Dinosaur Dig Also on this website Fossil Mysteries Fossil Mysteries : Online Activities Regional Fossils Fossil FAQs Geologic Time Line Jurassic Park FAQs What Are Fossils? Fossils are the remains or traces of ancient life. Fossils can be mineralized bones, teeth, shells, wood, or actual unaltered material from an organism, like frozen mammoth flesh, bones and fur. Eggs, nests, footprints, leaf impressions, burrows, and feces are examples of trace fossils. One thing all fossils have in common, they are OLD, at least 10,000 years old. Cretaceous fossils of marine invertebrates on exhibit at the San Diego Natural History Museum Fossils are Read More Go to Site
Votes:0 Skeletons! Drawing by Ben Cranshaw The skeletons issue Dragonfly has an article describing a dinosaur dig. The author of the article, Rodolfo Coria, is a paleontologist . If you
like old stuff and animals, you can become a paleontologist just like Rodolfo! Rodolfo searches for dinosaurs in Patagonia, which is located in southern
Argentina in South America. This is where Rodolfo lives. He found the biggest carnivorous (meat-eating) dinosaur ever known! It's named Giganotosaurus and is
about a half meter longer than Tyrannosaurus rex ! T. rex is estimated to have weighed about 6 tons (about 5 metric tons), while Giganotosaurus probably weighed eight to nine tons (about 7 to 8 metric tons)!! A paleontologist is a scientist who studies fossils . Fossils are the remains, impressions, or traces Read More Go to Site
Votes:0 "''' Xiphactinus audax oil painting ? Ron Garrett, Used with permission of Ron Garrett Xiphactinus audax Leidy 1870 (...not Portheus molossus Cope 1872) Largest Bony Fish of the Late Cretaceous Seas Copyright ? 2000-2007 by Mike Everhart - Last revised 10/19/2007 One of the largest Xiphactinus audax known (17 feet long) - Early Santonian age, Smoky Hill Chalk Formation, Gove County, KS. Discovered by Mike Everhart, 1996. Collected, prepared and displayed by Triebold Paleontology . After his 1871 trip to Kansas, E.D. Cope (1872a) was reported to have said, "At a similar location on Fox Creek, M. V. Hartwell found the skeleton of a very large fish, with "uncommonly powerful offensive dentition," probably of the Saurodonts. He [Cope] names this Cretaceous species Portheus Read More Go to Site
Votes:0 Zoom Dinosaurs - Dinosaur Information Zoom Dinosaurs is a comprehensive on-line hypertext book about dinosaurs. It is designed for students of all ages and levels of comprehension. It has an easy-to-use structure that allows readers to start at a basic level on each topic, and then to progress to much more advanced information as desired, simply by clicking on links. Dinosaur Site Index LITTLE EXPLORERS ENCHANTED LEARNING SOFTWARE BUSY LITTLE BRAINS CD-ROM for children How to Order Our Software Send us E-mail Read More Go to Site
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