chasmosaurs.blogspot.com
Love in the Time of Chasmosaurs: Vintage Dinosaur Art: The Superbook of Dinosaurs
https://chasmosaurs.blogspot.com/2015/05/vintage-dinosaur-art-superbook-of.html
Saturday, May 9, 2015. Vintage Dinosaur Art: The Superbook of Dinosaurs. Above Hopelessly outdated as it now is, his work still has a palpable solidity and 'reality' about it, and certainly left a great impression on many childhood dinosaur enthusiasts. Plus, I can't help but feel that more people should try giving Tyrannosaurus. Glassy black eyes. Like a doll's eyes. Particularly in terms of how the palaeoenvironment in the latter is far more richly realised. Onwards to the Triassic, and back to Bernard...
chasmosaurs.blogspot.com
Love in the Time of Chasmosaurs: Which Mammoth is Mopey Character are You?
https://chasmosaurs.blogspot.com/2015/04/which-mammoth-is-mopey-character-are-you.html
Wednesday, April 15, 2015. Which Mammoth is Mopey Character are You? We're now two weeks from the end of the Mammoth is Mopey. I've posted about here a few times and tweeted about prolifically. In the interest of keeping promotion fresh, we've hopped on the quiz bandwagon. They're scientifically proven to be the number one way to come to self-knowledge in the hustle and bustle of this digital world. No hallucinogens, fasting, or pilgrimage required! Labels: mammoth is mopey. Check out Mammoth is Mopey.
fcmdsc.wordpress.com
Evolution and Miss USA | More to Explore
https://fcmdsc.wordpress.com/2011/06/24/evolution-and-miss-usa
The Fort Collins Museum and Discovery Science Center Blog. I’ve Been Frittering My Life Away…. Heading towards the future. Evolution and Miss USA. June 24, 2011. By Katie Bowell, Curator of Interpretation. Alright, I admit it – I watched the Miss USA pageant last Sunday. What can I say? For example, take Angelina Kayyalaynen, Miss Washington’s, answer:. 8230;]Facts should be stated and we should know the facts as to how the world evolves because it does. But as far as when it comes to little theories...
fcmdsc.wordpress.com
I’ve Been Frittering My Life Away… | More to Explore
https://fcmdsc.wordpress.com/2011/06/17/ive-been-frittering-my-life-away
The Fort Collins Museum and Discovery Science Center Blog. From the Archive: Larimer County’s First Newspaper. Evolution and Miss USA. I’ve Been Frittering My Life Away…. June 17, 2011. Tags: Life Before the Dinosaurs. By Katie Bowell, Curator of Interpretation. I just discovered the blog. Life Before the Dinosaurs. When I was seven, I spent most of my time playing with. And taking naps. And, if we’re being honest, not much has changed. Life Before the Dinosaurs. It did have a pretty hard shell. Knows hi...
tanystropheus.wordpress.com
Pelagornis Update | The Theatrical Tanystropheus
https://tanystropheus.wordpress.com/2010/09/16/pelagornis-update
Random thoughts on Paleontology, Evolution, and Philosophy from a life-long eccentric. Good tidings and well-wishes! I’m currently unable to upload photographs to this particular enrty, but rest assured: I’ll lavish the post with fascinating images as soon as I’m able! At any rate, I wanted to call everyone’s attention to an exciting piece of news. Last February, I dedicated a post to the well-known but poorly represented (in the fossiliferous sense). A French member of the pelagornithidae family. By its...
hmnspaleo.blogspot.com
Prehistoric CSI: Day 3: It just keeps going and going and going and...
http://hmnspaleo.blogspot.com/2007/11/day-3-it-just-keeps-going-and-going-and.html
Paleontology with The Houston Museum of Natural Science. Wednesday, November 7, 2007. Day 3: It just keeps going and going and going and. Today, the team continued to excavate the new associated. Layer that was discovered yesterday. At the Amy site - and it just keeps on going. Just today, they've found additional fin spines (more than 6 so far) of extraordinary quality; several unidentified, large chunks bone in the same level as the fin spines as well as one at a slightly higher level; and a set of.
hmnspaleo.blogspot.com
Prehistoric CSI: David Temple, Associate Curator of Paleontology
http://hmnspaleo.blogspot.com/2007/10/david-temple-associate-curator-of.html
Paleontology with The Houston Museum of Natural Science. Thursday, October 25, 2007. David Temple, Associate Curator of Paleontology. Associate Curator of Paleontology David Temple likes to say he's also the unofficial head of the Museum's "Department of Mysteries" - meaning that he's our Renaissance Man. The go-to guy when you've got a weird bug, strange goo, unusual fossil, mysterious substance or other generally unknown object you'd like to know what to do with. Now in his 16th year at the Museum.
hmnspaleo.blogspot.com
Prehistoric CSI: Dr. Bakker's new book: Prehistoric Monsters!
http://hmnspaleo.blogspot.com/2008/02/dr-bakkers-new-book-prehistoric.html
Paleontology with The Houston Museum of Natural Science. Thursday, February 21, 2008. Dr Bakker's new book: Prehistoric Monsters! Latest book is out - and it's for kids! Well, I enjoyed it qute a bit, too - so maybe we should say it's for kids, and that kid inside all of us that still geeks out over 12-foot sea scorpions and the idea of. Tells the entire story of life on Earth - from the algae-rific Precambrian. Speaking of geeking out - Dr. Bakker also talks about our Seymour dig program. Right next to a.
tanystropheus.wordpress.com
What’s a ‘Tanystropheus’? | The Theatrical Tanystropheus
https://tanystropheus.wordpress.com/whats-a-tanystropheus
Random thoughts on Paleontology, Evolution, and Philosophy from a life-long eccentric. What’s a ‘Tanystropheus’? Good tidings and well-wishes! The answer to the question posed by the heading of this post is located here. After reading this article, you may wonder why I display images of proboscideans (elephants and kin) atop my blog and in my comments-section avatar rather than. Itself. This phenomenon is due to the simple fact that I personally find them to be more interesting (though. Dave Hone’s...
hmnspaleo.blogspot.com
Prehistoric CSI: Day 7: 10 OMGs
http://hmnspaleo.blogspot.com/2007/11/day-7-10-omgs.html
Paleontology with The Houston Museum of Natural Science. Sunday, November 11, 2007. Day 7: 10 OMGs. Dr Bakker has an impulsive, informal response to most paleontological finds. If you've got something cool - like a tooth in perfect condition, he'll exclaim, "Oh my God, look at this." If it's really cool - like a razor-sharp claw he's never seem before, it's "Oh my God, Oh my God, what is this? Before today was out, we had a 10 OMG discovery. But first. This morning, Dr. Bakker. That came out yesterday.
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