Saturday, April 30, 2011
Calgary: Digging Drumheller history
Calgary Herald: Digging Drumheller history
Drumheller is heralded around the globe as the Dinosaur Capital of the World, a title proudly displayed on the town's website.
www.drumhellermining100.com.
The Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology and its vast collection of fossils dating back hundreds of millions of years is a big draw for the 400,000 visitors who descend upon the small community northeast of Calgary every year.
But unbeknownst to many, including the town's own residents, there would be no Drumheller if it weren't for its once-booming coal mining industry.
For more than five decades, the 139 registered mines in the Badlands produced nearly 57 million tons of coal to heat countless homes in Alberta and across the country. It also drew thousands of people from all over the world to the sleepy town.
"We've forgotten our identity in Drumheller," said Mayor Terry Yemen. "Dinosaurs are cool, but don't forget about our coal mining history. Even (geologist Joseph) Tyrrell (after whom the famed paleontology museum is named) didn't come looking for dinosaurs -he came looking for coal."
To pay tribute to the town's mining heritage, Drumheller has brought back the Mayday Miners' Festival, which coincides with the 100th anniversary of coal mining in the town.
Traditionally held on May 1, the festival gave hard-working miners a day off and a chance for them to enjoy picnics, ice cream, games and speeches.
Residents will have a chance to enjoy those same festivities today and Sunday in Drumheller and nearby East Coulee.
A highlight of the festival will be the Miners' March through downtown Drumheller, which in the past featured the throngs of miners who picked, shovelled and risked their lives working underground.
"There were hundreds of men in the parade, walking in their nice town clothes, pants pressed, wearing a tie and carrying signs naming their union or their mine," said Linda Digby, executive director of the Atlas Coal Mine National Historic Site.
"It was a procession of pride. And families will be here again to march in honour of the miners in their family tree."
Drumheller was once a small, isolated community with 50 people.
But after early settler Samuel Drumheller kicked off the coal rush by registering one of the first commercial mines, in 1911, mines began popping up left and right.
The boom was facilitated by Canadian National Railway, which laid tracks through the town, and drew thousands of people, mainly from Europe, to the Badlands.
It was a busy, exciting, rough-andtumble place, said Bob Moffatt.
"If you didn't find the fight on one corner interesting, there was usually another one in the alley half a block away," said the now 75-year-old.
Fed up with school, Moffatt started a career in the mines at age 16, eventually working his way up to the role of pony driver, responsible for carting loads of coal out of the mines.
Moffatt said he earned a decent living, making about $14 a day as a driver. But he aspired to be a miner, like the men four generations before him, who were bringing in $25 to $30.
Several brushes with danger led him to think twice about that path.
On one occasion, Moffatt got tangled up while trying to control one of his ponies, nearly losing a leg.
He also narrowly escaped a phenomenon known as "the squeeze," where walls within the mines would start narrowing from top to bottom as the floor of the soft rock would rise.
Records show that falling rocks from the squeeze, as well as methane gas explosions and machinery-related incidents, claimed the lives of about 175 people in the Drumheller Valley coal fields, Digby said.
By the late 1940s, the mining business was on the decline. After the Leduc oil strike, families began switching over to natural gas, seen as a cleaner, more convenient fuel.
Mining families fled as sites rapidly shut down, turning boom towns into ghost towns, Digby said.
The last site, Atlas Coal Mine -now a national historic site -shipped its final load of coal in 1979.
Moffatt fled with the masses, abandoning the mines in 1960 to take up power engineering and later fire training, rising to the ranks of deputy fire commissioner for Alberta in charge of training.
The town's coal mining past was soon forgotten -but Moffatt says he hopes this weekend's festival will change that. For a complete listing of festival events, visit www.drumhellermining100.com.
Two Days: Dinosaurs roam all over New Jersey this weekend
NewJersey.com: Two Days: Dinosaurs roam all over New Jersey this weekend
Dino day
These large, powerful creatures roamed the Earth 245 million years ago -- and now are nowhere to be found. Discover the power of natural disasters, how they can cause the extinction of a species, and what kind of damage they can cause in our world at Dino Day tomorrow at the Newark Museum.
You can view life-size animatronic dinosaurs from Dinomotion, but be careful -- they might attack. Explore the tent and planetarium to learn how the giant land mass known as Pangea broke apart, how fossils form and watch the "Dinosaur Prophecy" showing at noon, and 2 and 4 p.m. in the planetarium.
The museum's Dino Day, in partnership with Rutgers Newark, runs from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Dino Day is free with suggested museum admission of $10 for adults and $6 for seniors, children and students. The planetarium is $5 for adults and $3 for children younger than 12, seniors and college students. The museum is at 49 Washington St. in Newark. Call (973) 596-6550 or visit newarkmuseum.org.
-- Meredith Galante
Finding fossils
Dig deeper in the dinosaur pit and try to find fossils. Today you are a paleontologist at Morris Museum's Dino Day in its new Digging Dinosaurs exhibition.
"The coolest thing about this is dinosaurs roamed New Jersey. The hadrosaurus, he was here," says Katie Caljean, the museum's education coordinator. "Dinosaurs are something magical. You don't see them every day -- yes, they are popular in films and movies, but dinosaurs exist in our imagination and we get to use the science and that imagination to figure out what they were like."
When you're done exploring, touch a real hadrosaur egg, marvel at dinosaur dung, hear stories from Dinoman and play "feed the T-Rex."
Alexandra Pais/For The Star-LedgerA skull cast of a Tyrannosaurus Rex at the Digging Dinosaurs, a new permanent exhibition with interactive stations at the Morris Museum in Morristown.
Dino Day runs from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Those who arrive before 1 p.m. will receive a Dino Day souvenir for each child younger than 10. $7 for children, and $10 for adults. The museum is at 6 Normandy Heights Road in Morris Township. Call (973) 971-3720 or visit morrismuseum.org.
-- Meredith Galante
Time machine
Travel back to a time when dinosaurs roamed the earth in the Geological Time Machine today in Geology Hall at Rutgers Day.
Dinosaurs, fossils, mastodons and minerals can all be found in the geology museum, giving you a look at what life was like before humans inhabited the Earth.
Parking, shuttles and admission are free. Geology Hall is at 83 Somerset St., New Brunswick. Call (732) 445-4636 or visit rutgersday.rutgers.edu.
State's dinosaur
The New Jersey state dinosaur is the Hadrosaurus foulkii.
It's the world's first complete dinosaur skeleton -- discovered in Haddonfield, Camden County.
William Parker Foulke, a scientist, was vacationing in Haddonfield when a local farmer told him bones had been found in his field 20 years earlier. With the help of a team of miners, Foulke dug around a marl pit and discovered the skeleton of a 25-foot-long, 8-ton hadrosaurus that lived about 70 million years ago, in the Cretaceous Age.
The dinosaur was named Hadrosaurus foulkii, after its discoverer; in 1991, it was named the state dinosaur.
Haddonfield is proud of its place in dinosaur history. A plaque marking the excavation site is on Maple Avenue, while John Giannotti's sculpture of Hadrosaurus foulkii is on Lantern Lane in downtown Haddonfield. For information, visit hadrosaurus.com or historiccamdencountycom.
- Peter Genovese
The largest dino
The group of long-necked, long-tailed, plant-eating dinosaurs known as sauropods -- they of the miniscule gray matter -- are the focus of an exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History in New York.
The World's Largest Dinosaurs, " an exhibit about sauropods, is photographed at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. In one section of the exhibit, the huge hind leg bones of a Supersaurus vivianae are compared to the bones of a human skeleton and other animals, including a Komodo dragon (Varanus komodoensis), pictured here.
It's called "The World's Largest Dinosaurs" and it's a must-stop for dinosaur devotees. A replica of Argentinosaurus, with beady yellow eyes, greets visitors at the entrance. A 60-foot-long, 11-foot-high model of Mamenchisaurus, another sauropod, is the exhibit's centerpiece. There's a 60-foot-long mural of more dinosaurs, and a telephone-pole-like leg of a supersaurus, discovered in Colorado in 1972.
And kids can dig for dinosaur "fossils" in a dig pit.
When you leave the exhibit, it's not the end of your dinosaur day. Just around the corner is the David H. Koch Dinosaur Wing, with more dinosaurs, including T-Rex.
The museum is at Central Park West and 79th Street; call (212) 769-5100 or visit amnh.org.
- Peter Genovese
Bones galore
William Parker Foulke, the scientist who helped unearth Hadrosaurus foulkii in Haddonfield in 1858, was a member of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia. Joseph Leidy, a curator at the academy, studied the bones and realized that the skeleton's relatively short, slender front legs meant dinosaurs likely walked on their hind legs, as opposed to the conventional wisdom of the time, that dinosaurs moved along on their bellies like other lizards.
Leidy and artist Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins assembled the skeleton and mounted it at the academy in 1868. It was the first mounted skeleton in the world and the first dinosaur on display in a public museum, and it spawned a craze for all things -saurus.
The full skeleton is no longer on display, but casts of some of the bones found in Haddonfield can be viewed, along fossils from 30 other species of dinosaurs, including a full, 42-foot long T-Rex and the 8-inch claw of a Dryptosaurus aquilunguis.
The academy is at 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway; call (215) 299-1000 or visit ansp.org.
- Vicki Hyman
Car-part-asaurus
Stella is no ordinary Stegosaurus -- she's got style. An almost life-size sculpture by Farmingdale-based artist Jim Gary, Stella wears bright pinks and purples and is assembled out of discarded car parts. Visit her at the Monmouth Museum on the Brookdale Community College Campus, 765 Newman Springs Road in Lincroft. The museum is open today from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and tomorrow from 1 to 5 p.m. $7 (free for children younger than 2); call (732) 747-2266 or visit monmouthmuseum.org.
Dino day
These large, powerful creatures roamed the Earth 245 million years ago -- and now are nowhere to be found. Discover the power of natural disasters, how they can cause the extinction of a species, and what kind of damage they can cause in our world at Dino Day tomorrow at the Newark Museum.
You can view life-size animatronic dinosaurs from Dinomotion, but be careful -- they might attack. Explore the tent and planetarium to learn how the giant land mass known as Pangea broke apart, how fossils form and watch the "Dinosaur Prophecy" showing at noon, and 2 and 4 p.m. in the planetarium.
The museum's Dino Day, in partnership with Rutgers Newark, runs from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Dino Day is free with suggested museum admission of $10 for adults and $6 for seniors, children and students. The planetarium is $5 for adults and $3 for children younger than 12, seniors and college students. The museum is at 49 Washington St. in Newark. Call (973) 596-6550 or visit newarkmuseum.org.
-- Meredith Galante
Finding fossils
Dig deeper in the dinosaur pit and try to find fossils. Today you are a paleontologist at Morris Museum's Dino Day in its new Digging Dinosaurs exhibition.
"The coolest thing about this is dinosaurs roamed New Jersey. The hadrosaurus, he was here," says Katie Caljean, the museum's education coordinator. "Dinosaurs are something magical. You don't see them every day -- yes, they are popular in films and movies, but dinosaurs exist in our imagination and we get to use the science and that imagination to figure out what they were like."
When you're done exploring, touch a real hadrosaur egg, marvel at dinosaur dung, hear stories from Dinoman and play "feed the T-Rex."
Alexandra Pais/For The Star-LedgerA skull cast of a Tyrannosaurus Rex at the Digging Dinosaurs, a new permanent exhibition with interactive stations at the Morris Museum in Morristown.
Dino Day runs from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Those who arrive before 1 p.m. will receive a Dino Day souvenir for each child younger than 10. $7 for children, and $10 for adults. The museum is at 6 Normandy Heights Road in Morris Township. Call (973) 971-3720 or visit morrismuseum.org.
-- Meredith Galante
Time machine
Travel back to a time when dinosaurs roamed the earth in the Geological Time Machine today in Geology Hall at Rutgers Day.
Dinosaurs, fossils, mastodons and minerals can all be found in the geology museum, giving you a look at what life was like before humans inhabited the Earth.
Parking, shuttles and admission are free. Geology Hall is at 83 Somerset St., New Brunswick. Call (732) 445-4636 or visit rutgersday.rutgers.edu.
State's dinosaur
The New Jersey state dinosaur is the Hadrosaurus foulkii.
It's the world's first complete dinosaur skeleton -- discovered in Haddonfield, Camden County.
William Parker Foulke, a scientist, was vacationing in Haddonfield when a local farmer told him bones had been found in his field 20 years earlier. With the help of a team of miners, Foulke dug around a marl pit and discovered the skeleton of a 25-foot-long, 8-ton hadrosaurus that lived about 70 million years ago, in the Cretaceous Age.
The dinosaur was named Hadrosaurus foulkii, after its discoverer; in 1991, it was named the state dinosaur.
Haddonfield is proud of its place in dinosaur history. A plaque marking the excavation site is on Maple Avenue, while John Giannotti's sculpture of Hadrosaurus foulkii is on Lantern Lane in downtown Haddonfield. For information, visit hadrosaurus.com or historiccamdencountycom.
- Peter Genovese
The largest dino
The group of long-necked, long-tailed, plant-eating dinosaurs known as sauropods -- they of the miniscule gray matter -- are the focus of an exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History in New York.
The World's Largest Dinosaurs, " an exhibit about sauropods, is photographed at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. In one section of the exhibit, the huge hind leg bones of a Supersaurus vivianae are compared to the bones of a human skeleton and other animals, including a Komodo dragon (Varanus komodoensis), pictured here.
It's called "The World's Largest Dinosaurs" and it's a must-stop for dinosaur devotees. A replica of Argentinosaurus, with beady yellow eyes, greets visitors at the entrance. A 60-foot-long, 11-foot-high model of Mamenchisaurus, another sauropod, is the exhibit's centerpiece. There's a 60-foot-long mural of more dinosaurs, and a telephone-pole-like leg of a supersaurus, discovered in Colorado in 1972.
And kids can dig for dinosaur "fossils" in a dig pit.
When you leave the exhibit, it's not the end of your dinosaur day. Just around the corner is the David H. Koch Dinosaur Wing, with more dinosaurs, including T-Rex.
The museum is at Central Park West and 79th Street; call (212) 769-5100 or visit amnh.org.
- Peter Genovese
Bones galore
William Parker Foulke, the scientist who helped unearth Hadrosaurus foulkii in Haddonfield in 1858, was a member of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia. Joseph Leidy, a curator at the academy, studied the bones and realized that the skeleton's relatively short, slender front legs meant dinosaurs likely walked on their hind legs, as opposed to the conventional wisdom of the time, that dinosaurs moved along on their bellies like other lizards.
Leidy and artist Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins assembled the skeleton and mounted it at the academy in 1868. It was the first mounted skeleton in the world and the first dinosaur on display in a public museum, and it spawned a craze for all things -saurus.
The full skeleton is no longer on display, but casts of some of the bones found in Haddonfield can be viewed, along fossils from 30 other species of dinosaurs, including a full, 42-foot long T-Rex and the 8-inch claw of a Dryptosaurus aquilunguis.
The academy is at 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway; call (215) 299-1000 or visit ansp.org.
- Vicki Hyman
Car-part-asaurus
Stella is no ordinary Stegosaurus -- she's got style. An almost life-size sculpture by Farmingdale-based artist Jim Gary, Stella wears bright pinks and purples and is assembled out of discarded car parts. Visit her at the Monmouth Museum on the Brookdale Community College Campus, 765 Newman Springs Road in Lincroft. The museum is open today from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and tomorrow from 1 to 5 p.m. $7 (free for children younger than 2); call (732) 747-2266 or visit monmouthmuseum.org.
Friday, April 29, 2011
Ohio: Dinosaurs Alive not opening with park
WDTN.com2: Dinosaurs Alive not opening with park
Kings Island's newest exhibit won't open with park
Updated: Friday, 29 Apr 2011, 3:04 AM EDT
Published : Friday, 29 Apr 2011, 3:04 AM EDT
MASON, Ohio (WDTN) - Construction crews continue their work on a new exhibit at Kings Island amusement park ahead of the park's opening on Saturday, April 30.
The new Dinosaurs Alive! at Kings Island will feature more than 60 life-sized dinosaurs, including 56 animatronic models, including the largest animatronic dinosaur in the world, the Ruyang Yellow River dinosaur, which measures an incredible 72 feet long, 12 fee wide and more than 30 feet high.
Other highlights include an excavation site replica, kids’ dig area and a gift shop. Dinosaurs Alive! at Kings Island opens May 26.
Kings Island's newest exhibit won't open with park
Updated: Friday, 29 Apr 2011, 3:04 AM EDT
Published : Friday, 29 Apr 2011, 3:04 AM EDT
MASON, Ohio (WDTN) - Construction crews continue their work on a new exhibit at Kings Island amusement park ahead of the park's opening on Saturday, April 30.
The new Dinosaurs Alive! at Kings Island will feature more than 60 life-sized dinosaurs, including 56 animatronic models, including the largest animatronic dinosaur in the world, the Ruyang Yellow River dinosaur, which measures an incredible 72 feet long, 12 fee wide and more than 30 feet high.
Other highlights include an excavation site replica, kids’ dig area and a gift shop. Dinosaurs Alive! at Kings Island opens May 26.
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Save the dinosaurs in Amarillo
ConnectAmarillo.com: Save the dinosaurs in Amarillo
AMARILLO, TEXAS -- You could be one of thousands of people in the panhandle to help save the dinosaurs in Amarillo. The T-Rex experience traveling show has been a hit at the Don Harrington Discovery Center, but it's supposed to leave at the end of this April.
Because kids and parents have been reacting so well, the center has started a campaign to "Help Us Save A 'Saurus" and extend the dinosaurs' stay through Memorial day.
"Dinosaurs are really amazing creatures. They excite us, they excite our children and it's a great way to get started in science. I got my start in science by falling in love with dinosaurs and we want to a whole new generation of kids who are excited by math, science, engineering, and technology, no better exhibit, than the T-Rex experience, to do that," said Chip Lindsey, the Associate Director at the Don Harrington Discovery Center.
To save a 'saurus you can click here to make a donation or you can drop by the center and pick up a sticker for a dollar . The exhibit is already being extended two weeks, so more people can see this once in a lifetime event.
AMARILLO, TEXAS -- You could be one of thousands of people in the panhandle to help save the dinosaurs in Amarillo. The T-Rex experience traveling show has been a hit at the Don Harrington Discovery Center, but it's supposed to leave at the end of this April.
Because kids and parents have been reacting so well, the center has started a campaign to "Help Us Save A 'Saurus" and extend the dinosaurs' stay through Memorial day.
"Dinosaurs are really amazing creatures. They excite us, they excite our children and it's a great way to get started in science. I got my start in science by falling in love with dinosaurs and we want to a whole new generation of kids who are excited by math, science, engineering, and technology, no better exhibit, than the T-Rex experience, to do that," said Chip Lindsey, the Associate Director at the Don Harrington Discovery Center.
To save a 'saurus you can click here to make a donation or you can drop by the center and pick up a sticker for a dollar . The exhibit is already being extended two weeks, so more people can see this once in a lifetime event.
'Real Close' dinosaurs will rock and roll at Seattle's zoo
The Seattle Times: 'Real Close' dinosaurs will rock and roll at Seattle's zoo
By Madeline McKenzie
Seattle Times staff
PREV of NEXT
ELAINE THOMPSON / AP
Animatronic dinosaurs roam a primeval forest in Woodland Park Zoo's "Dinosaurs. Real Close" exhibit, the star attraction among summer-season activities at Seattle's zoo starting this weekend.
The outdoor exhibit, running Saturday through Sept. 5, includes a 19-foot-tall Brachiosaurus, a full-size T-Rex, a nest full of duck-billed Edmontosaurus hatchlings and other animatronic creatures that move, roar, snarl, hiss and spit, along with opportunities to learn about fossils, dinosaurs and the robotic wizardry that brings them to life.
Among other new features at the zoo, the carousel will now be powered with the assist of energy-saving solar panels. To celebrate the change, the zoo offers free carousel rides for visitors of all ages this Saturday and Sunday. The historic carousel with hand-carved wooden horses is open zoo hours daily, usually for $2 a ride.
Summer-season pricing, hours and programming start Sunday, including a new opportunity to feed an elephant; it happens from 1:30-2:30 p.m. daily for a fee of $5 per person (free for children 2 and younger). Other extra-fee summer activities include giraffe feeding from a raised platform, 10-11 a.m. and 2:30-3:30 p.m. daily ($5/person); the Willawong Station Bird Feeding Experience with 150 colorful Australian birds ($1 per seed stick), and Upapi African beading from 12:30-4:30 p.m. daily, with $3 per bracelet and $8 per necklace fees that support water-hole restoration in Kenya.
Other summer activities and attractions are included with zoo admission. They include African Savanna Safari and African Village storytelling, Wednesdays-Sundays; meeting cows, chickens, goats, sheep and pigs in the Family Farm from 11 a.m.-5 p.m. daily; along with Raptor Flight programs, the Rain Forest Food Pavilion and food concessions, keeper chats and up-close Animal Encounters. Zoomazium, an indoor, nature-themed playspace for ages 8 and younger, is open zoo hours with daily special programs for toddlers and older kids.
Summer special events include the popular ZooTunes outdoor concert series, announcing this year's performers Friday, with tickets on sale May 6; and evening and overnight Zoo Adventures, camps, classes and volunteer opportunities.
The details
Time: 9:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday through Sept. 30.
Cost: Saturday: $11.50/adult, $8.50/ages 3-12; Sunday through Sept. 30: $17.50/adult, $11.50/ages 3-12; $2 discount for ages 65 and older and people with disabilities. Additional $3 for dinosaur exhibit; cash-only elephant or giraffe feeding, $5/person; bird feeding sticks, $1/each.
Location: West Entrance, 5500 Phinney Ave. N.; South Gate, 750 N. 50th St., Seattle.
Getting there: From the south, take Interstate 5 north to Northeast. 50th Street (Exit 169), go west 1.3 miles to the South Entrance at North 50th Street and Fremont Avenue North. From the north, take I-5 south to Northeast 50th Street (Exit 169), go west 1.3 miles to the South Gate. Zoo parking $5.25. Metro Transit information: 206-553-3000 or tripplanner.kingco.gov. Bike racks at all zoo entrances, covered bicycle parking at West Entrance.
By Madeline McKenzie
Seattle Times staff
PREV of NEXT
ELAINE THOMPSON / AP
Animatronic dinosaurs roam a primeval forest in Woodland Park Zoo's "Dinosaurs. Real Close" exhibit, the star attraction among summer-season activities at Seattle's zoo starting this weekend.
The outdoor exhibit, running Saturday through Sept. 5, includes a 19-foot-tall Brachiosaurus, a full-size T-Rex, a nest full of duck-billed Edmontosaurus hatchlings and other animatronic creatures that move, roar, snarl, hiss and spit, along with opportunities to learn about fossils, dinosaurs and the robotic wizardry that brings them to life.
Among other new features at the zoo, the carousel will now be powered with the assist of energy-saving solar panels. To celebrate the change, the zoo offers free carousel rides for visitors of all ages this Saturday and Sunday. The historic carousel with hand-carved wooden horses is open zoo hours daily, usually for $2 a ride.
Summer-season pricing, hours and programming start Sunday, including a new opportunity to feed an elephant; it happens from 1:30-2:30 p.m. daily for a fee of $5 per person (free for children 2 and younger). Other extra-fee summer activities include giraffe feeding from a raised platform, 10-11 a.m. and 2:30-3:30 p.m. daily ($5/person); the Willawong Station Bird Feeding Experience with 150 colorful Australian birds ($1 per seed stick), and Upapi African beading from 12:30-4:30 p.m. daily, with $3 per bracelet and $8 per necklace fees that support water-hole restoration in Kenya.
Other summer activities and attractions are included with zoo admission. They include African Savanna Safari and African Village storytelling, Wednesdays-Sundays; meeting cows, chickens, goats, sheep and pigs in the Family Farm from 11 a.m.-5 p.m. daily; along with Raptor Flight programs, the Rain Forest Food Pavilion and food concessions, keeper chats and up-close Animal Encounters. Zoomazium, an indoor, nature-themed playspace for ages 8 and younger, is open zoo hours with daily special programs for toddlers and older kids.
Summer special events include the popular ZooTunes outdoor concert series, announcing this year's performers Friday, with tickets on sale May 6; and evening and overnight Zoo Adventures, camps, classes and volunteer opportunities.
The details
Time: 9:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday through Sept. 30.
Cost: Saturday: $11.50/adult, $8.50/ages 3-12; Sunday through Sept. 30: $17.50/adult, $11.50/ages 3-12; $2 discount for ages 65 and older and people with disabilities. Additional $3 for dinosaur exhibit; cash-only elephant or giraffe feeding, $5/person; bird feeding sticks, $1/each.
Location: West Entrance, 5500 Phinney Ave. N.; South Gate, 750 N. 50th St., Seattle.
Getting there: From the south, take Interstate 5 north to Northeast. 50th Street (Exit 169), go west 1.3 miles to the South Entrance at North 50th Street and Fremont Avenue North. From the north, take I-5 south to Northeast 50th Street (Exit 169), go west 1.3 miles to the South Gate. Zoo parking $5.25. Metro Transit information: 206-553-3000 or tripplanner.kingco.gov. Bike racks at all zoo entrances, covered bicycle parking at West Entrance.
Fossils ‘Older Than Dinosaurs’ on Display [May 14-15]
The Intelligencer, Wheeling News Register: Fossils ‘Older Than Dinosaurs’ on Display
Area residents will have the opportunity to see and purchase fossils that are "older than dinosaur bones" during the Wheeling Area Rock, Mineral, Gem, Jewelry & Fossil Show scheduled for May 14-15 at the St. Alphonsus Parish Center in Centre Wheeling.
Robert Strong, co-owner of Smart Centre Market, said the inaugural event, which is being hosted by the Near Earth Object Foundation and sponsored by the Smart Centre Market and Prehistoric Planet of Barrackville, W.Va., will be a showcase for fossils, rocks and minerals that will "just blow you away."
"So if you're interested in rocks, minerals, fossils, gemstones, that kind of thing, this would be the perfect place to come in and look at them," Strong added. He said there will be educational opportunities for children and adults at the show.
Along with eight or nine vendors there will be a "sluice-type" wash where participants can try their luck at finding minerals and gems.
"Up to six tables will be covered with some of the coolest fossils that you've ever seen," said Strong.
He said many of these fascinating fossils are hundreds of millions of years old, and will include actual fossils like trilobites and ammonites. The term trilobite refers to an extinct class of arthropods. These marine invertebrates first appeared approximately 570 million years ago and were the earliest animals known to possess vision. It is also the state fossil of Ohio. Ammonites refers to an extinct group of mollusks. These spiral shelled squid-like creatures died out around the same time dinosaurs did approximately 65 million years ago.
Strong said after attending a rock, mineral, and fossil show in Morgantown for about the past 12 years now, he thought it was time to create a similar show for the Wheeling area. Strong is hopeful the show will create additional buzz in the historic Centre Market section of Wheeling. He is also hopeful the show will become an annual event that will become the "springboard" for other similar events in Centre Wheeling.
"We've got thousands of people that need to have a reason to come into Wheeling ... They know Wheeling is here, they just need an extra reason to come to Wheeling," he said.
"If we can get people to come down to Centre Market and understand how wonderful and fabulous Centre Market is ... and we can get folks not just from Wheeling, but from the surrounding towns to come to Wheeling and do something special that they can't do in their town ... then we will probably get families that will come in and say, 'Hey, lets go and spend the weekend in Wheeling," Strong added.
The event is free and is scheduled from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Saturday, May 14, and from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sunday, May 15. Light food, snacks and drinks will be available and music will be provided by Cabin Fever String Band.
For additional information about the show, call 304-233-4667.
Area residents will have the opportunity to see and purchase fossils that are "older than dinosaur bones" during the Wheeling Area Rock, Mineral, Gem, Jewelry & Fossil Show scheduled for May 14-15 at the St. Alphonsus Parish Center in Centre Wheeling.
Robert Strong, co-owner of Smart Centre Market, said the inaugural event, which is being hosted by the Near Earth Object Foundation and sponsored by the Smart Centre Market and Prehistoric Planet of Barrackville, W.Va., will be a showcase for fossils, rocks and minerals that will "just blow you away."
"So if you're interested in rocks, minerals, fossils, gemstones, that kind of thing, this would be the perfect place to come in and look at them," Strong added. He said there will be educational opportunities for children and adults at the show.
Along with eight or nine vendors there will be a "sluice-type" wash where participants can try their luck at finding minerals and gems.
"Up to six tables will be covered with some of the coolest fossils that you've ever seen," said Strong.
He said many of these fascinating fossils are hundreds of millions of years old, and will include actual fossils like trilobites and ammonites. The term trilobite refers to an extinct class of arthropods. These marine invertebrates first appeared approximately 570 million years ago and were the earliest animals known to possess vision. It is also the state fossil of Ohio. Ammonites refers to an extinct group of mollusks. These spiral shelled squid-like creatures died out around the same time dinosaurs did approximately 65 million years ago.
Strong said after attending a rock, mineral, and fossil show in Morgantown for about the past 12 years now, he thought it was time to create a similar show for the Wheeling area. Strong is hopeful the show will create additional buzz in the historic Centre Market section of Wheeling. He is also hopeful the show will become an annual event that will become the "springboard" for other similar events in Centre Wheeling.
"We've got thousands of people that need to have a reason to come into Wheeling ... They know Wheeling is here, they just need an extra reason to come to Wheeling," he said.
"If we can get people to come down to Centre Market and understand how wonderful and fabulous Centre Market is ... and we can get folks not just from Wheeling, but from the surrounding towns to come to Wheeling and do something special that they can't do in their town ... then we will probably get families that will come in and say, 'Hey, lets go and spend the weekend in Wheeling," Strong added.
The event is free and is scheduled from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Saturday, May 14, and from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sunday, May 15. Light food, snacks and drinks will be available and music will be provided by Cabin Fever String Band.
For additional information about the show, call 304-233-4667.
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
See a Dinosaur? Take A Photo!
Smithsonian.com: Dinosaur Tracking, Where paleontology meets pop culture: Dinosaur Sighting: Tyrannosaur Stowaway
If you spot a tiny tyrannosaur peeking out from the back of a jeep in the vicinity of Fort Campbell on the Kentucky-Tennessee border, you aren’t seeing things. The dinosaur and the custom-painted Jurassic Park jeep are the creations of Daniel Peterson, the director of the U.S. Army Museum at the military base. “I drive the jeep everywhere and it attracts a lot of attention,” says Peterson, and he even has plans for an even more impressive dinosaur display. “I am currently building a 22-foot-long T. rex that will appear to have ‘pounced’ on the back of the jeep,” though he notes that the bigger dinosaur “will only be installed on special occasions.”
If you see the tyrannosaur-toting jeep during your travels, snap a photo and send it to us! Submissions of dinosaurs—and other ancient beasts—in unusual places should be sent to [dinosaursightings@gmail.com].
Adelaide, Australia: Walking With Dinosaurs juggernaut rolls into town
Adelaide Now: Walking With Dinosaurs juggernaut rolls into town
ITS subject matter is millions of years old, but the technology behind Walking With Dinosaurs is anything but prehistoric.
A grand spectacle complete with a moving set and larger-than-life creatures backed by a sweeping score and inspired lighting, the Walking With Dinosaurs juggernaut rolled into town last night, returning to the Adelaide Entertainment Centre after four years touring the world.
The $20 million show, brought to town in 33 semi-trailers, charts the rise and fall of dinosaurs across the ages.
Boasting 10 different species including an 11m brachiosaurus, Walking With Dinosaurs runs until May 1 before heading to Melbourne, Sydney, Newcastle and then on to Brisbane.
ITS subject matter is millions of years old, but the technology behind Walking With Dinosaurs is anything but prehistoric.
A grand spectacle complete with a moving set and larger-than-life creatures backed by a sweeping score and inspired lighting, the Walking With Dinosaurs juggernaut rolled into town last night, returning to the Adelaide Entertainment Centre after four years touring the world.
The $20 million show, brought to town in 33 semi-trailers, charts the rise and fall of dinosaurs across the ages.
Boasting 10 different species including an 11m brachiosaurus, Walking With Dinosaurs runs until May 1 before heading to Melbourne, Sydney, Newcastle and then on to Brisbane.
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Why the MoMA Should Have Dinosaurs
Smithsonian.com: Why the MoMA Should Have Dinosaurs
The Museum of Modern Art needs dinosaurs. That was the conclusion of one young visitor named Annabelle after she failed to find any dinosaurs at the MoMA. “[Y]ou call your self a museum!” she chided on a comment cards, and her brief critique has been popping up all over the web this week.
Not everyone has been very sympathetic to Annabelle’s disappointment. At The Hairpin, Edith Zimmerman shot back the snarky reply: “Why don’t you figure out what museum you’re at.” Jezebel’s Margaret Hartmann wondered if Annabelle had been “confused about the field trip’s destination.” Hartmann might be right—I know I’d feel let down if I was expecting to visit the AMNH and wound up at the MoMA—but I think Annabelle has a point. The MoMA really could use some dinosaurs.
As popular as they are, dinosaurs don’t get very much respect in the art world. Dinosaurs are appraised as kitsch or kid’s stuff, and the fact that dinosaur art often strives for scientific accuracy would seem to separate it from artistic expression in modern art. Yet, as Stu Pond has pointed out, artistic representations of prehistory do not always have to be scientific illustrations. Dinosaurs are powerful embodiments of themes like evolution and extinction, and some artists have tapped into that symbolic pool in their works of art.
Artist Allan McCollum has drawn on dinosaurs for at least two of his pieces. In 1991, McCollum created an artificial bed of multicolored sauropod limb bones for his piece Lost Objects. (Dinosaur National Monument paleontologist Dan Chure has more about the details of the bones.) Two years later he arranged a gallery of dinosaur track casts taken from the coal mines of Price, Utah for an installation called Natural Copies. These pieces were cast as fine art rather than objects of scientific scrutiny, and as summarized on his site, McCollum intended these installations to invoke the diverse meanings of the fossils:
McCollum offers his Natural Copies as an allegorical presentation of the narrative attached to other kinds of collectibles and fine art objects: in their various modes of production, exhibit, distribution, and collection; their use and exchange value; their function as markers of natural history or embodiments of cultural memory; their ambiguous status as found objects, cultural artifacts, scientific specimens, or fine art objects; and their relation to local lore and folk stories of the region.
Sculptor Robert Smithson also found inspiration in prehistory. In 1970 on the northeastern shore of Utah’s Great Salt Lake, he created a huge rock installation known as Spiral Jetty. Though the theme of the piece is said to represent the decay of Smithson’s marriage, a film documenting the construction of the Spiral Jetty turns the heavy machinery used to create the work into modern-day dinosaurs that have come to re-shape the earth.
Dinosaurs have played more direct roles in fine art, too. One of the most famous images of prehistoric life is Rudolph Zallinger‘s The Age of Reptiles in Yale’s Peabody Museum of Natural History. Illustrated by Zallinger between 1943 and 1947, the gigantic painting was created in a difficult style called fresco-secco, and that alone is an extraordinary achievement. But what is most impressive about the Age of Reptiles is that it draws the viewer through a sequence of beautiful prehistoric landscapes, from the time vertebrates first crawled out onto land to the end of the Cretaceous, where a smoking volcano symbolizes the impending doom the last dinosaurs face. Zallinger’s mural is not just a reconstruction—The Age of Reptiles is an exquisite work of art that captures our perception of prehistory’s flow.
A pair of Iguanodon created by Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins in the early 19th century. From Wikipedia.
Zallinger was just one of a long line of exceptionally talented artists with a passion for prehistory. Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins—the 19th-century artistic genius behind the Crystal Palace Dinosaurs—had planned a vast panorama of prehistory for New York’s Central Park, and during the early 20th century, AMNH artist Erwin S. Christman rendered illustrations of bones that are unparalleled in detail. Nor should we forget Charles R. Knight—arguably the most influential paleo-artist of all time—or those like Luis Rey and William Stout who carry on his legacy today. The late sculptor Jim Gary even played on Smithson’s perspective of trucks as dinosaurs and created prehistoric animals out of old car parts, bridging the gap between the modern and the ancient. Even if the work of some of these artists can’t be considered fine art, their skill and power of imagination should not be overlooked. Where scientific illustration stops and where artistic expression starts can be a subjective thing.
In a summary on their “About” page, the MoMA states that it “is dedicated to the conversation between the past and the present.” This is probably intended to apply to the art world itself—drawing connections between new works and what has come before—but why not broaden that a little more into the conversation between the deep past and the present? Why not bring dinosaurs into the modern art museum? A Stegosaurus or Albertosaurus skeleton would seem out of place, but dinosaurs are such potent cultural symbols that I would frankly be surprised if they were nowhere to be found in a modern art museum. So, if any MoMA staff happen to read this, I have one recommendation—follow Annabelle’s advice and find some dinosaurs for your museum.
Monday, April 25, 2011
Earth Day, colossal dinosaurs a popular magnet for museum
A slow day, Dinosaur news wise...
Democrat Chronicle: Earth Day, colossal dinosaurs a popular magnet for museum
After discovering Easter baskets hidden in linen closets filled with chocolate bunnies and jelly beans, some families opted for a different way to work off their sugar high. At the Rochester Museum and Science Center on Sunday afternoon, children and parents alike roamed the museum's many exhibits.
One of the featured exhibitions was the museum's Earth Day Celebration: Raindrops and Runoff, which helped attract more then 3,500 visitors from Friday through Sunday, said Dan Winklebleck, public programs supervisor at the museum.
"We work with the Water Education Collaborative to conduct outreach and education activities to teach the importance of protecting our water," he said. The Water Education Collaborative (WEC) is a collection of organizations that works together to increase water quality education in Monroe County.
Visitors to the exhibit could learn just how important water is to life on Earth and how to keep it clean and healthy. Activities and exhibitions included a scavenger hunt, testing water quality, discovering macroinvertebrates creatures that share the water and traveling the water cycle from evaporation to accumulation on a playground-like climbing toy. Children could also make their own superhero capes like the H20 Hero, the mascot for the WEC's campaign.
On Saturday, the museum also had a family workshop to make rain barrels, which catch rainwater to store it for future use and can also help reduce pollutants.
While families took part in the Earth Day exhibits, others were also there to see the Colossal Dinosaur exhibit before it closes May 1. Elizabeth Lewis of Pittsford brought her 4-year-old son Tim to the museum Sunday afternoon. "(Tim) loves dinosaurs, so we just had to come see the dinosaurs," she said.
Democrat Chronicle: Earth Day, colossal dinosaurs a popular magnet for museum
After discovering Easter baskets hidden in linen closets filled with chocolate bunnies and jelly beans, some families opted for a different way to work off their sugar high. At the Rochester Museum and Science Center on Sunday afternoon, children and parents alike roamed the museum's many exhibits.
One of the featured exhibitions was the museum's Earth Day Celebration: Raindrops and Runoff, which helped attract more then 3,500 visitors from Friday through Sunday, said Dan Winklebleck, public programs supervisor at the museum.
"We work with the Water Education Collaborative to conduct outreach and education activities to teach the importance of protecting our water," he said. The Water Education Collaborative (WEC) is a collection of organizations that works together to increase water quality education in Monroe County.
Visitors to the exhibit could learn just how important water is to life on Earth and how to keep it clean and healthy. Activities and exhibitions included a scavenger hunt, testing water quality, discovering macroinvertebrates creatures that share the water and traveling the water cycle from evaporation to accumulation on a playground-like climbing toy. Children could also make their own superhero capes like the H20 Hero, the mascot for the WEC's campaign.
On Saturday, the museum also had a family workshop to make rain barrels, which catch rainwater to store it for future use and can also help reduce pollutants.
While families took part in the Earth Day exhibits, others were also there to see the Colossal Dinosaur exhibit before it closes May 1. Elizabeth Lewis of Pittsford brought her 4-year-old son Tim to the museum Sunday afternoon. "(Tim) loves dinosaurs, so we just had to come see the dinosaurs," she said.
Sunday, April 24, 2011
The biggest of the big
The Morning Call: The biggest of the big. 'The World's Largest Dinosaurs' exhibit in New York City reveals secrets for living large
"The World's Largest Dinosaurs," a new exhibit at New York City's American Museum of Natural History, digs deeper than fossil pits to take visitors beyond standard dinosaur skeletons and rock-studded fossils. It teaches fascinating new facts about how these tractor-trailer-size giants lived and thrived for 140 million years.
What dieter wouldn't envy a sauropod who had to eat 1,000 pounds of food daily, just to "beef up" by 10 to 12 pounds a day? Of course, there were downsides for these eating machines. As the exhibit explains, they needed to grow new teeth as often as once a month because eating so much wore their teeth down quickly. Apparently, they also farted (excuse me!) often because they released about 13 gallons of gas per day while processing their food.
Mamenchisaurus, a massive 18-year-old female dinosaur at the heart of the exhibit, stands 11 feet tall and 60 feet long and doesn't blush at all about such revealing facts.
Fleshed out to her life-sized full figure, she lights up to expose even more information about herself and other members of her plant-eating sauropod clan that also included the Apatosaurus (formerly known as the Brontosaurus). Although the average weight of the Mamenchisaurus was 12 tons, the biggest sauropod of all, the Argentinosaurus, tipped the scales at 90 tons. You'd have to pile 15 modern-day elephants on a scale to make his weight!
People are always fascinated by the world's large things, from the tallest buildings to the largest ball of twine, says museum president Ellen Futter. "These sauropods were the most super-sized creatures of all time and their size raises all kinds of questions about how and why they were so big and what they needed to live."
She adds, "We've moved beyond bones to biology. Scientists are learning more and more about what made these animals tick."
Their findings went into the creation of the Mamenchisaurus as well as into interactive parts of the exhibition, including hands-on and computer activities for kids and a re-creation of a dig site complete with fossils.
As you sit on one of the benches along the Mamenichisaurus' left side, take a minute to gaze from the tip of her face to the end of her tail. An amazing old girl, she lived 160 million years ago, in what is now China. She is depicted with a mouthful of plants, as she grazes her way to her required daily allowance of greenery.
Listen and you'll hear her breathing and her beating heart. Thanks to a video projection system, you'll see her sides move and learn more about her super-efficient respiratory system, with storage sacs that filled with fresh air and gave her twice the fresh air for every breath she took.
Then, check out the projections of her tummy. It functioned like a compost heap, with sausage-like projections that contained the fermenting plants she ate. Turning the plants into energy could take as long as two weeks.
Walk along the Mamenchisaurus' other side and you'll see the rough texture of her skin. Although the old girl lacks the Disney-like allure she'd get from singing, dancing, walking or talking, she still makes a big impression worthy of the footprints her family once cast upon the earth.
Beyond the life-size model there's a wealth of new information and audiovisuals that will increase your understanding of these giants. A multidisciplinary approach was used to develop the intriguing new information about the sauropods. Paleontologists were joined by biologists, botanists, animal nutritionists and engineers who used their expertise to draw conclusions about the dinosaurs' lives. New technology, including CT scans, has helped reveal even more, like the two gyroscope-style structures lodged inside a sauropod's skull that were its balance organs and embryos in dinosaur eggs.
"Finding out what kept the dinosaurs alive, how much they ate, how they grew and how they got blood from their heart to their brains at the end of such long necks were unapproachable questions a few years ago. Now we can shed light on their lives," said Michael Novacek, senior vice president and curator of the Division of Paleontology at the museum.
The exhibition begins by exploring how size affects just about everything an animal does, from eating and breathing to moving and reproducing, as well as how the sauropods got bigger and bigger over the 140 million years they roamed the earth. It explains that predators don't usually attack the largest animals of a group. So natural selection favored bigger animals and over time, the descendents of the larger animals kept getting bigger and bigger.
Another section explores teeth and eating, and explains how these huge plant-eaters tore off the tips of branches or stripped the leaves from them with rake-like teeth and swallowed them whole. One sign says, "Because they had to get as much down their gullets as possible, taking the time to chew would have been a fatal error."
The exhibit has 11 areas, including Head, Neck and Movement; Heart and Circulation; Lungs and Breathing; Stomach and Digestion; Eggs and Reproduction; How massive were sauropods?; What did sauropods look like?; How did sauropods behave? and How do paleontologists excavate fossils? They'll give you a much broader picture of all aspects of a dinosaur's life than you'd get by simply exploring the museum's other dinosaur-related halls of skeletons and fossils.
As you go, you'll discover features dinosaurs have in common with today's creatures, from the breathing system and egg-laying characteristics of birds to the light-but-long necks of giraffes and the digestive system of Galapagos turtles.
You'll gain new insights. Their big-enough brains that weighed in at less than half a pound (our brains weigh 48 ounces) gave them enough smarts to find food, herd their young and be the dominant plant eaters on earth for 140 million years. However, as an exhibit sign says, "That's not to say they were deep thinkers!"
These giants probably moved at speeds from 1 to 5 miles per hour.
What would it have been like to touch one? Their skin was dry and warm, and their scales were bumpy and knobby. Because they had no sweat glands, they didn't perspire.
You can touch dino teeth and skulls, calculate a dinosaur's size from its femur bone and see how much effort it took for a dinosaur's heart to circulate blood throughout its body. Just be sure you've eaten your Wheaties before you try to pump the hand-pump set to the correct pressure.
You'll encounter an eye-popping, bowl of greens that's taller than a person and as large as a whole group of people standing inside a large elevator. The contents of these mega-eaters' favorite salad? Botanists say it included ginkgo, ferns and conifers and the tough-but-nutritious horsetail plant.
After examining a range of eggs laid by living and extinct species, you'll realize dino eggs weren't as huge as you'd expect, with the largest ones weighing in at around 9 pounds. You can see and touch fossil eggs and examine eggshells' pores with a magnifier. At the end, kids can don goggles and use brushes and chisels to find fossils in a re-created dinosaur dig.
Dr. Steven Perry, a zoology professor at the University of Bonn in Germany, was one of the researchers involved in determining how these huge creatures breathed. On hand on press preview day, he lamented, "I'd love to be a kid now. In my youth, all we could do was look at the fossilized bones and skeletons and say, 'Wow.' Now, however, kids can ask questions that I asked and get answers."
"The World's Largest Dinosaurs," a new exhibit at New York City's American Museum of Natural History, digs deeper than fossil pits to take visitors beyond standard dinosaur skeletons and rock-studded fossils. It teaches fascinating new facts about how these tractor-trailer-size giants lived and thrived for 140 million years.
What dieter wouldn't envy a sauropod who had to eat 1,000 pounds of food daily, just to "beef up" by 10 to 12 pounds a day? Of course, there were downsides for these eating machines. As the exhibit explains, they needed to grow new teeth as often as once a month because eating so much wore their teeth down quickly. Apparently, they also farted (excuse me!) often because they released about 13 gallons of gas per day while processing their food.
Mamenchisaurus, a massive 18-year-old female dinosaur at the heart of the exhibit, stands 11 feet tall and 60 feet long and doesn't blush at all about such revealing facts.
Fleshed out to her life-sized full figure, she lights up to expose even more information about herself and other members of her plant-eating sauropod clan that also included the Apatosaurus (formerly known as the Brontosaurus). Although the average weight of the Mamenchisaurus was 12 tons, the biggest sauropod of all, the Argentinosaurus, tipped the scales at 90 tons. You'd have to pile 15 modern-day elephants on a scale to make his weight!
People are always fascinated by the world's large things, from the tallest buildings to the largest ball of twine, says museum president Ellen Futter. "These sauropods were the most super-sized creatures of all time and their size raises all kinds of questions about how and why they were so big and what they needed to live."
She adds, "We've moved beyond bones to biology. Scientists are learning more and more about what made these animals tick."
Their findings went into the creation of the Mamenchisaurus as well as into interactive parts of the exhibition, including hands-on and computer activities for kids and a re-creation of a dig site complete with fossils.
As you sit on one of the benches along the Mamenichisaurus' left side, take a minute to gaze from the tip of her face to the end of her tail. An amazing old girl, she lived 160 million years ago, in what is now China. She is depicted with a mouthful of plants, as she grazes her way to her required daily allowance of greenery.
Listen and you'll hear her breathing and her beating heart. Thanks to a video projection system, you'll see her sides move and learn more about her super-efficient respiratory system, with storage sacs that filled with fresh air and gave her twice the fresh air for every breath she took.
Then, check out the projections of her tummy. It functioned like a compost heap, with sausage-like projections that contained the fermenting plants she ate. Turning the plants into energy could take as long as two weeks.
Walk along the Mamenchisaurus' other side and you'll see the rough texture of her skin. Although the old girl lacks the Disney-like allure she'd get from singing, dancing, walking or talking, she still makes a big impression worthy of the footprints her family once cast upon the earth.
Beyond the life-size model there's a wealth of new information and audiovisuals that will increase your understanding of these giants. A multidisciplinary approach was used to develop the intriguing new information about the sauropods. Paleontologists were joined by biologists, botanists, animal nutritionists and engineers who used their expertise to draw conclusions about the dinosaurs' lives. New technology, including CT scans, has helped reveal even more, like the two gyroscope-style structures lodged inside a sauropod's skull that were its balance organs and embryos in dinosaur eggs.
"Finding out what kept the dinosaurs alive, how much they ate, how they grew and how they got blood from their heart to their brains at the end of such long necks were unapproachable questions a few years ago. Now we can shed light on their lives," said Michael Novacek, senior vice president and curator of the Division of Paleontology at the museum.
The exhibition begins by exploring how size affects just about everything an animal does, from eating and breathing to moving and reproducing, as well as how the sauropods got bigger and bigger over the 140 million years they roamed the earth. It explains that predators don't usually attack the largest animals of a group. So natural selection favored bigger animals and over time, the descendents of the larger animals kept getting bigger and bigger.
Another section explores teeth and eating, and explains how these huge plant-eaters tore off the tips of branches or stripped the leaves from them with rake-like teeth and swallowed them whole. One sign says, "Because they had to get as much down their gullets as possible, taking the time to chew would have been a fatal error."
The exhibit has 11 areas, including Head, Neck and Movement; Heart and Circulation; Lungs and Breathing; Stomach and Digestion; Eggs and Reproduction; How massive were sauropods?; What did sauropods look like?; How did sauropods behave? and How do paleontologists excavate fossils? They'll give you a much broader picture of all aspects of a dinosaur's life than you'd get by simply exploring the museum's other dinosaur-related halls of skeletons and fossils.
As you go, you'll discover features dinosaurs have in common with today's creatures, from the breathing system and egg-laying characteristics of birds to the light-but-long necks of giraffes and the digestive system of Galapagos turtles.
You'll gain new insights. Their big-enough brains that weighed in at less than half a pound (our brains weigh 48 ounces) gave them enough smarts to find food, herd their young and be the dominant plant eaters on earth for 140 million years. However, as an exhibit sign says, "That's not to say they were deep thinkers!"
These giants probably moved at speeds from 1 to 5 miles per hour.
What would it have been like to touch one? Their skin was dry and warm, and their scales were bumpy and knobby. Because they had no sweat glands, they didn't perspire.
You can touch dino teeth and skulls, calculate a dinosaur's size from its femur bone and see how much effort it took for a dinosaur's heart to circulate blood throughout its body. Just be sure you've eaten your Wheaties before you try to pump the hand-pump set to the correct pressure.
You'll encounter an eye-popping, bowl of greens that's taller than a person and as large as a whole group of people standing inside a large elevator. The contents of these mega-eaters' favorite salad? Botanists say it included ginkgo, ferns and conifers and the tough-but-nutritious horsetail plant.
After examining a range of eggs laid by living and extinct species, you'll realize dino eggs weren't as huge as you'd expect, with the largest ones weighing in at around 9 pounds. You can see and touch fossil eggs and examine eggshells' pores with a magnifier. At the end, kids can don goggles and use brushes and chisels to find fossils in a re-created dinosaur dig.
Dr. Steven Perry, a zoology professor at the University of Bonn in Germany, was one of the researchers involved in determining how these huge creatures breathed. On hand on press preview day, he lamented, "I'd love to be a kid now. In my youth, all we could do was look at the fossilized bones and skeletons and say, 'Wow.' Now, however, kids can ask questions that I asked and get answers."
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Doctor Who,” the world’s longest-running science fiction television show, returns to the small screen on Saturday, April 23, with a bang—literally.
Los Angeles Times: Harley Garbani dies at 88; Fossil hunter unearthed significant dinosaur finds
A self-taught paleontologist and archaeologist with a longtime passion for hunting dinosaur bones, Harley Garbani found partial skulls of the youngest-known Tyrannosaurus rex and the youngest-known Triceratops.
By Dennis McLellan, Los Angeles Times
April 24, 2011
He was a onetime plumber who gained unexpected renown pursuing his lifelong avocation as a fossil hunter who discovered some of the world's most significant dinosaur fossils.
From Mexico to Montana, self-taught paleontologist and archaeologist Harley Garbani spent decades "prospecting for bones" in the badlands where bedrock is exposed. He also amassed one of the finest collections of Native American artifacts in Southern California.
His prime fossil finds are on display at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, the University of California Museum of Paleontology in Berkeley and the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Mont.
Garbani died Thursday of natural causes at his home in Hemet, said his wife, Mary. He was 88.
"He was a very passionate fossil hunter and someone who understood the scientific value of fossils," said Luis Chiappe, director of the Natural History Museum's Dinosaur Institute.
"He didn't have any academic training in the field, and he didn't do any research," Chiappe said. "He was primarily a field person, and he made some truly unique discoveries."
Those finds include the partial skulls of the youngest-known Tyrannosaurus rex and the youngest-known Triceratops, two iconic dinosaurs, which will be on display in the museum's new Dinosaur Hall when it opens July 16.
The skulls are among many of Garbani's fossil finds that have been displayed over the years at the L.A. County museum, which paid him to lead fossil-hunting expeditions to Montana in the 1960s.
While leading such a trip in 1966, Garbani found the skull, jawbone and other parts of a T. rex on the Engdahl Ranch, 20 miles northwest of the small town of Jordan, Mont.
"That was only the third specimen that was in any way complete that had ever been found," said paleontologist Lowell Dingus, who devoted a chapter to Garbani in his 2004 book, "Hell Creek, Montana: America's Key to the Prehistoric Past."
"He was certainly among the greatest fossil collectors that ever lived and the greatest one that I have ever known and worked with," said Dingus, who worked with Garbani while doing his dissertation fieldwork at UC Berkeley three decades ago.
During the summers from 1972 until several years ago, Garbani was part of the field crews of Berkeley's Museum of Paleontology that made trips to Montana.
"He not only collected fossil vertebrates but fossil clams and snails and plants," said Bill Clemens, a curator at the Berkeley museum who led the field trips.
"For us, one of the neat things that he found was the skull of a very young Triceratops, and already that's been a focus of research as a number of people have been looking into the patterns of growth of that dinosaur," Clemens said.
"He just had a sense for being able to find these amazing fossils — both large and small," Dingus said. "He was an expert not only at finding dinosaurs, but also finding very tiny teeth that are small enough that you study them under a microscope. These teeth were from the small mammals that lived in the shadows of the large dinosaurs.
"His skill at this wasn't simply based on luck. What he was able to do was figure out the kinds of rock layers and the kinds of outcrops that were most likely to have fossils because he had found them in similar-looking rock layers before."
Garbani was a welcome visitor to the sprawling ranch owned by Robert and Jane Engdahl — and to neighboring ranches — in the rugged hill country of the Missouri Breaks in Montana.
"He called the Hell Creek Bar" in Jordan "the office," Jane Engdahl said. "That's where he always met with these other bone diggers."
During the last four or five fossil-hunting trips Garbani made to the area, she said, "he'd have a potluck supper at the bar. He'd walk around with poker chips and give them to the friends to buy their drinks with. That would be 'Free drinks from Harley.'
"He was well-loved by everybody in Garfield County," she said.
Garbani — who had, among other things, a previously unknown gopher species and a small dinosaur named after him — received the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology's first Morris F. Skinner Award in 1990, in recognition of his fossil-collecting and contributions to science.
"He was a curious man, and that made him the expert that he was," said Mary Garbani. "I always said he was a humble man with nothing to be humble about."
Garbani was born Sept. 19, 1922, in Los Angeles and moved to the San Jacinto Valley in Riverside County when he was 3.
Growing up on a farm, he made his first find while trying to catch a pony when he was 8. "It was a large point, like part of a knife or spear," he told the Los Angeles Times in 2007. "I was hooked ever since."
A year later, his father was driving an earthmover and young Garbani was following behind when he made another discovery.
"It was a petrified bone, a femur. It came from a very large camel from the Pleistocene Age," he said. "I was 9 and had a collection going."
For many years, Garbani searched for Native American artifacts within a hundred-mile radius of the San Jacinto Valley.
He helped inspire a group to create the Western Science Center at Diamond Valley Lake near Hemet, where some of his archeological items have been displayed. His collection will be donated to the center, his wife said.
In addition to his wife of 11 years, he is survived by his son, David; three grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
A funeral service will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at Miller-Jones Mortuary, 1501 W. Florida Ave., Hemet.
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Age of the Dinosaur exhibition opens Friday 22 April
Natural History Museum: Age of the Dinosaur exhibition opens Friday 22 April
The animatronic dinosaurs are lifelike enough, but the exhibition also brings to life their natural habitat, so visitors get immersed in Jurassic and Cretaceous environments along with weird and wonderful now extinct plants and animals.
As well as the animatronics, Age of the Dinosaur has CGI (computer generated images) film, stunning images, interactive stations, and amazing specimens, including real fossil dinosaur bones, to help visitors explore a world of more than 65 million years ago.
Well-preserved fossil of an Rhamphorhynchus, a flying reptile, or pterosaur.
And keep hold of your ticket as there is a NaturePlus barcode on it that lets you continue your dinosaur and fossil exploration back home on your computer.
Museum specimens
Age of the Dinosaur is rich with Museum specimens giving a taster of the important science work that goes on behind the scenes.
They come from the Museum’s world-class palaeontology collections and this is the first time in 5 years that so many have been used in a temporary exhibition.
Olympic gold medallist Denise Lewis OBE
Animatronics
The exhibition has 6 animatronic dinosaurs, and an animatronic Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird.
The 1.5 tonne Tarbosaurus took 8 people and a forklift truck to get it safely into the Museum. They are produced by Kokoro, based in Tokyo, Japan.
Jurassic zone
In the Jurassic zone, see a huge tooth from a pliosaur, one of the many Jurassic marine monsters.
Find out more dinosaur facts and fun at the interactive stations
Along with plesiosaurs and ichthyosaurs, these menacing predators used their jagged, ridged teeth to gorge themselves on fish, squid and other sea creatures.
Take a look at a special fossil of a pterosaur. These flying reptiles had wings supported by a single long finger. They shared the air with birds and could fly as soon as they hatched.
The first dinosaur to come to life in the exhibition is a life-size Camarasaurus eating from the treetops of a Jurassic forest and calling to the rest of its herd.
Actor John Hannah
Cretaceous zone
In the Cretaceous zone, get a glimpse of some of the first flowering plants. Before the Cretaceous Period, plants only used seeds or spores to reproduce.
Examine the skull of a duck-billed dinosaur, Lambeosaurus lambei, that that had 700 teeth!
More life-size animatronic dinosaur scenes are waiting, including Protoceratops defending its nest and the tall, slim, ostrich-like Gallimimus.
Keep an eye out for Oviraptor and Velociraptor, two small, vicious meat-eating dinosaurs.
And the final dramatic Tarbosaurus, a cousin of T.rex, and every bit as scary.
The animatronic dinosaurs are lifelike enough, but the exhibition also brings to life their natural habitat, so visitors get immersed in Jurassic and Cretaceous environments along with weird and wonderful now extinct plants and animals.
As well as the animatronics, Age of the Dinosaur has CGI (computer generated images) film, stunning images, interactive stations, and amazing specimens, including real fossil dinosaur bones, to help visitors explore a world of more than 65 million years ago.
Well-preserved fossil of an Rhamphorhynchus, a flying reptile, or pterosaur.
And keep hold of your ticket as there is a NaturePlus barcode on it that lets you continue your dinosaur and fossil exploration back home on your computer.
Museum specimens
Age of the Dinosaur is rich with Museum specimens giving a taster of the important science work that goes on behind the scenes.
They come from the Museum’s world-class palaeontology collections and this is the first time in 5 years that so many have been used in a temporary exhibition.
Olympic gold medallist Denise Lewis OBE
Animatronics
The exhibition has 6 animatronic dinosaurs, and an animatronic Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird.
The 1.5 tonne Tarbosaurus took 8 people and a forklift truck to get it safely into the Museum. They are produced by Kokoro, based in Tokyo, Japan.
Jurassic zone
In the Jurassic zone, see a huge tooth from a pliosaur, one of the many Jurassic marine monsters.
Find out more dinosaur facts and fun at the interactive stations
Along with plesiosaurs and ichthyosaurs, these menacing predators used their jagged, ridged teeth to gorge themselves on fish, squid and other sea creatures.
Take a look at a special fossil of a pterosaur. These flying reptiles had wings supported by a single long finger. They shared the air with birds and could fly as soon as they hatched.
The first dinosaur to come to life in the exhibition is a life-size Camarasaurus eating from the treetops of a Jurassic forest and calling to the rest of its herd.
Actor John Hannah
Cretaceous zone
In the Cretaceous zone, get a glimpse of some of the first flowering plants. Before the Cretaceous Period, plants only used seeds or spores to reproduce.
Examine the skull of a duck-billed dinosaur, Lambeosaurus lambei, that that had 700 teeth!
More life-size animatronic dinosaur scenes are waiting, including Protoceratops defending its nest and the tall, slim, ostrich-like Gallimimus.
Keep an eye out for Oviraptor and Velociraptor, two small, vicious meat-eating dinosaurs.
And the final dramatic Tarbosaurus, a cousin of T.rex, and every bit as scary.
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Enjoy An Authentic Whiff Of Dinosaur (Coventry, UK)
CoventryTelegraph.net: Enjoy An Authentic Whiff Of Dinosaur
ANYONE who has ever wondered what a dinosaur would have smelled like can do so from today with the launch of a new animatronic exhibition.
The Age Of The Dinosaur at the Natural History Museum in London features a number of life-size and realistic-looking ancient beasts, complete with sound and smell.
The dinosaurs, including a Protoceratops and Velociraptor, are displayed in replications of their natural habitat from when they roamed the earth more than 65 million years ago.
Paul Barrett, of the museum's department of palaeontology, said the majority of the models were life-size, although some had to be scaled down.
He said: "The idea of the exhibition is actually trying to show dinosaurs in their natural environments alongside different sorts of plants and animals that we'd see at the same time, so rather than just concentrating on a particular dinosaur or a particular question relating to dinosaurs, we really want to give a view of what a dinosaur world would have been like.
"The animatronics are as realistic as we can possibly make them, so we use the latest scientific discoveries to inform everything about them from how they sound to the texture of their skin, and even these days we can say a little bit about dinosaur colour."
Mr Barrett said the roaring sounds that can be heard coming from the dinosaurs were based on living animals today.
He said: "We've been using a lot of information from, for example, our knowledge of how they hear to work out the sorts of sounds they could have heard, and then use examples from living animals to fill in the gaps about the sorts of noises we might expect to hear if we were wondering about Jurassic forests."
He added that visitors can press a button on some of the exhibits in order to be able to tell what the dinosaur would have smelt like.
The exhibition, which has been a year in development and lasts until September 4, also features 60 specimens from the museum's collections, including dinosaur bones.
ANYONE who has ever wondered what a dinosaur would have smelled like can do so from today with the launch of a new animatronic exhibition.
The Age Of The Dinosaur at the Natural History Museum in London features a number of life-size and realistic-looking ancient beasts, complete with sound and smell.
The dinosaurs, including a Protoceratops and Velociraptor, are displayed in replications of their natural habitat from when they roamed the earth more than 65 million years ago.
Paul Barrett, of the museum's department of palaeontology, said the majority of the models were life-size, although some had to be scaled down.
He said: "The idea of the exhibition is actually trying to show dinosaurs in their natural environments alongside different sorts of plants and animals that we'd see at the same time, so rather than just concentrating on a particular dinosaur or a particular question relating to dinosaurs, we really want to give a view of what a dinosaur world would have been like.
"The animatronics are as realistic as we can possibly make them, so we use the latest scientific discoveries to inform everything about them from how they sound to the texture of their skin, and even these days we can say a little bit about dinosaur colour."
Mr Barrett said the roaring sounds that can be heard coming from the dinosaurs were based on living animals today.
He said: "We've been using a lot of information from, for example, our knowledge of how they hear to work out the sorts of sounds they could have heard, and then use examples from living animals to fill in the gaps about the sorts of noises we might expect to hear if we were wondering about Jurassic forests."
He added that visitors can press a button on some of the exhibits in order to be able to tell what the dinosaur would have smelt like.
The exhibition, which has been a year in development and lasts until September 4, also features 60 specimens from the museum's collections, including dinosaur bones.
Animated dinosaurs to visit Chester Zoo (UK)
Ellesmere Port Pioneer (United Kingdom): Animated dinosaurs to visit Chester Zoo
DINOSAURS will be seen at Chester Zoo this summer in what promises to be one of the most exciting and ground-breaking exhibits seen in a UK zoo.
The new exhibition, featuring 13 mechanical structures, will open in July.
Featuring movements and sounds, the dinosaurs will include the giant apatosaurus, with its long neck and whip-like tail, the evil-looking dilophosaurus, with its long, sharp claws and the infamous tyrannosaurus rex, the most feared land predator of all time.
The animated models will be part of an outdoor trail called Dinosaurs at Large! and will show visitors what it would have been like to get close to such huge beasts.
The event, which also aims to spread the message that once a creature is gone, it is gone forever, will run from July 1-October 8 and will be open every day from 10am-6pm.
Dinosaurs at Large! will be open to all visitors to Chester Zoo, with entry included in zoo admission charges.
For more details, visit www.chesterzoo.org
DINOSAURS will be seen at Chester Zoo this summer in what promises to be one of the most exciting and ground-breaking exhibits seen in a UK zoo.
The new exhibition, featuring 13 mechanical structures, will open in July.
Featuring movements and sounds, the dinosaurs will include the giant apatosaurus, with its long neck and whip-like tail, the evil-looking dilophosaurus, with its long, sharp claws and the infamous tyrannosaurus rex, the most feared land predator of all time.
The animated models will be part of an outdoor trail called Dinosaurs at Large! and will show visitors what it would have been like to get close to such huge beasts.
The event, which also aims to spread the message that once a creature is gone, it is gone forever, will run from July 1-October 8 and will be open every day from 10am-6pm.
Dinosaurs at Large! will be open to all visitors to Chester Zoo, with entry included in zoo admission charges.
For more details, visit www.chesterzoo.org
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Everybody loves Tyrannosaurus
Guardian.co.uk: Notes & Theories, Dispatches from the Science Desk: Everybody loves Tyrannosaurus
wonder if Henry Fairfield Osborn created a self-fulfilling prophecy when he named Tyrannosaurus rex. The tyrant king is the most beloved and celebrated of all dinosaurs, and when the first specimen was put on display in 1906 – nothing more than the hips and legs – The New York Times declared Tyrannosaurus to be the "prize fighter of antiquity". It has held onto that top spot ever since.
But our love for Tyrannosaurus can be unhealthy. You don't need to look further than the headlines to see that the great Cretaceous predator has become the standard by which almost all of prehistory is judged. Dunkleosteus – a Devonian armoured fish – "had [a] bite stronger than a T. rex"; the invertebrate Hurdia was heralded as the "T. rex of the Cambrian period"; and, despite having a different shape, Colombia's fossil snake Titanoboa was said to be "as big as T. rex".
I'm almost convinced that there is a journalism guide that advises: "If a catchy headline doesn't readily present itself for a new fossil discovery, a reference to T. rex will do at a pinch."
Granted, such references to Tyrannosaurus are quick and easy ways to invoke the ferocity of extinct organisms, but our reliance on the tyrant becomes more problematic in stories about its dinosaurian kin. Upon making its debut last January, the early dinosaur Eodromaeus was dubbed the "earliest known T. rex relative", and, a few weeks later, the bizarre dinosaur Linhenykus was presented as a "one-fingered T. rex relative". Then, just last month, the dinosaur Zhuchengtyrannus was announced to be "T. rex's new cousin".
The phrases "T. rex relative" and "T. rex cousin" are thrown around so often that they have nearly lost their meaning. Citing the news of Zhuchengtyrannus as a "T. rex cousin", NPR blogger Bill Chappell wrote "It's exciting news, but doesn't it seem like we've heard something similar recently?" He wondered why both Linhenykus and the small tyrannosaur Raptorex had been given the same honorary title.
Dinosaurs have become victims of their own success. The pace of dinosaur discoveries is so rapid – and requires so much context – that journalists simply can't keep up. Only the truly exceptional, eye-grabbing stories make it to press, and when they do the stories are typically along the lines of "New dinosaur discovered. Cousin of [famous dinosaur]. Ooooh."
The tyrannosaurs themselves provide perfect examples. For decades Tyrannosaurus, Albertosaurus, Daspletosaurus, and other tyrants were considered to be "Carnosaurs" – a grab-bag group of giant predators that also included Allosaurus, Spinosaurus, and others. Palaeontologists have since split up this dinosaurian mish-mash into a branching tree of theropod dinosaurs.
As is now understood, tyrannosaurs fit inside a highly diverse theropod subgroup called coelurosaurs, which also encompass small, sickle-clawed hunters (Velociraptor); long-necked herbivores with Freddy Krueger claws (Therizinosaurus); ostrich-mimics (Gallimimus); and birds, among others. Even better, within the past 10 years palaeontologists have found a wealth of tyrannosaurs that document the group's evolution from small, feather-covered creatures to some of the largest predators of all time. Zhuchengtyrannus is only the latest tyrannosaur to be welcomed into the family.
Both Eodromaeus and Linhenykus were only distant relatives of Tyrannosaurus. Eodromaeus preceded tyrannosaurs by over 165m years, and was about as closely related to the tyrants as to any other giant, badass theropod you care to name. Linhenykus, on the other claw, belonged to a coelurosaur lineage called alvarezsaurs which were not notably close to the tyrants.
The true "T. rex cousins" were found among the tyrannosauroids – a group that included everything from the pint-sized, fuzzy-feathered Dilong to large, deep-snouted apex predators such as Tyrannosaurus and the recently described Teratophoneus.
In a review of tyrannosaurs published last September, a team of theropod experts noted that at least six new tyrants had been named within a year of their paper's debut, and two more have been named since then. (More are on the way – attendees at last year's Society for Vertebrate Paleontology meeting in Pittsburgh got a preview of a new, as-yet-unnamed tyrant.)
Yet the flock of new tyrants does not give us a complete explanation for the confusion about these dinosaurs. Tyrannosaurus – along with Triceratops, Stegosaurus, Apatosaurus and Edmontosaurus – represents one of the primary dinosaur archetypes that have been popularised for over a century. They are THE dinosaurs, and their long shadows obscure recently discovered species that have led palaeontologists to revise our understanding of dinosaur evolution and relationships.
Take Linhenykus, for example. Who – other than palaeontologists – knows what an alvarezsaur is? From a writer's perspective, it is easier to play up its tenuous connection to Tyrannosaurus than spend a paragraph explaining the dinosaur's unique nature. It doesn't fit in the already established set of familiar dinosaur shapes, so a well-known dinosaur is used to make the introduction.
As science writers, we face the difficult task of condensing technical details into compelling, easily accessible stories that will hopefully catch the eyes of readers before they click over to another webpage. That doesn't mean that we should shrink from accuracy. We are not doing our jobs if we simply refer every sharp-toothed dinosaur to the tyrant family because Tyrannosaurus provides a solid hook. If we fall victim to this trope, we perpetuate a cycle in which no one will understand what an alvarezsaur is because we never explain it and we never explain it because we don't think anyone will understand.
There will always be more dinosaur discoveries than available media space to disseminate their details. That is true of any scientific discipline, and it is why context has become so vital. Our reliance on Tyrannosaurus as an attention-grabbing anchor is just one symptom of a more pervasive affliction in which brevity and page views are valued over placing news in context.
Palaeontologists are not exempt, either. Too often – from grant applications to press releases – we have relied upon the cultural cachet of Tyrannosaurus to get attention.
There is more to palaeontology than Tyrannosaurus rex. Just as the tyrant king was just one member of a rich and diverse dinosaurian family, so are new scientific discoveries intimately connected to the ongoing interrogation of nature. We would do well to remember that.
Brian Switek is the author of Written in Stone: Evolution, the Fossil Record, and Our Place in Nature. He writes for the WIRED Science blog Laelaps and Smithsonian magazine's Dinosaur Tracking
References
Brusatte, SL et al (2010). Tyrannosaur Paleobiology: New Research on Ancient Exemplar Organisms. Science (New York, N.Y.); 329 (5998): 1481-1485. DOI: 10.1126/science.1193304
Hone, D et al (2011). A new tyrannosaurine theropod, Zhuchengtyrannus magnus is named based on a maxilla and dentary. Cretaceous Research (in press). DOI: 10.1016/j.cretres.2011.03.005
Martinez, R et al (2011). A Basal Dinosaur from the Dawn of the Dinosaur Era in Southwestern Pangaea. Science; 331 (6014): 206-210. DOI: 10.1126/science.1198467
Nesbitt, S et al (2011). A small alvarezsaurid from the eastern Gobi Desert offers insight into evolutionary patterns in the Alvarezsauroidea. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology; 31 (1): 144-153. DOI: 10.1080/02724634.2011.540053
wonder if Henry Fairfield Osborn created a self-fulfilling prophecy when he named Tyrannosaurus rex. The tyrant king is the most beloved and celebrated of all dinosaurs, and when the first specimen was put on display in 1906 – nothing more than the hips and legs – The New York Times declared Tyrannosaurus to be the "prize fighter of antiquity". It has held onto that top spot ever since.
But our love for Tyrannosaurus can be unhealthy. You don't need to look further than the headlines to see that the great Cretaceous predator has become the standard by which almost all of prehistory is judged. Dunkleosteus – a Devonian armoured fish – "had [a] bite stronger than a T. rex"; the invertebrate Hurdia was heralded as the "T. rex of the Cambrian period"; and, despite having a different shape, Colombia's fossil snake Titanoboa was said to be "as big as T. rex".
I'm almost convinced that there is a journalism guide that advises: "If a catchy headline doesn't readily present itself for a new fossil discovery, a reference to T. rex will do at a pinch."
Granted, such references to Tyrannosaurus are quick and easy ways to invoke the ferocity of extinct organisms, but our reliance on the tyrant becomes more problematic in stories about its dinosaurian kin. Upon making its debut last January, the early dinosaur Eodromaeus was dubbed the "earliest known T. rex relative", and, a few weeks later, the bizarre dinosaur Linhenykus was presented as a "one-fingered T. rex relative". Then, just last month, the dinosaur Zhuchengtyrannus was announced to be "T. rex's new cousin".
The phrases "T. rex relative" and "T. rex cousin" are thrown around so often that they have nearly lost their meaning. Citing the news of Zhuchengtyrannus as a "T. rex cousin", NPR blogger Bill Chappell wrote "It's exciting news, but doesn't it seem like we've heard something similar recently?" He wondered why both Linhenykus and the small tyrannosaur Raptorex had been given the same honorary title.
Dinosaurs have become victims of their own success. The pace of dinosaur discoveries is so rapid – and requires so much context – that journalists simply can't keep up. Only the truly exceptional, eye-grabbing stories make it to press, and when they do the stories are typically along the lines of "New dinosaur discovered. Cousin of [famous dinosaur]. Ooooh."
The tyrannosaurs themselves provide perfect examples. For decades Tyrannosaurus, Albertosaurus, Daspletosaurus, and other tyrants were considered to be "Carnosaurs" – a grab-bag group of giant predators that also included Allosaurus, Spinosaurus, and others. Palaeontologists have since split up this dinosaurian mish-mash into a branching tree of theropod dinosaurs.
As is now understood, tyrannosaurs fit inside a highly diverse theropod subgroup called coelurosaurs, which also encompass small, sickle-clawed hunters (Velociraptor); long-necked herbivores with Freddy Krueger claws (Therizinosaurus); ostrich-mimics (Gallimimus); and birds, among others. Even better, within the past 10 years palaeontologists have found a wealth of tyrannosaurs that document the group's evolution from small, feather-covered creatures to some of the largest predators of all time. Zhuchengtyrannus is only the latest tyrannosaur to be welcomed into the family.
Both Eodromaeus and Linhenykus were only distant relatives of Tyrannosaurus. Eodromaeus preceded tyrannosaurs by over 165m years, and was about as closely related to the tyrants as to any other giant, badass theropod you care to name. Linhenykus, on the other claw, belonged to a coelurosaur lineage called alvarezsaurs which were not notably close to the tyrants.
The true "T. rex cousins" were found among the tyrannosauroids – a group that included everything from the pint-sized, fuzzy-feathered Dilong to large, deep-snouted apex predators such as Tyrannosaurus and the recently described Teratophoneus.
In a review of tyrannosaurs published last September, a team of theropod experts noted that at least six new tyrants had been named within a year of their paper's debut, and two more have been named since then. (More are on the way – attendees at last year's Society for Vertebrate Paleontology meeting in Pittsburgh got a preview of a new, as-yet-unnamed tyrant.)
Yet the flock of new tyrants does not give us a complete explanation for the confusion about these dinosaurs. Tyrannosaurus – along with Triceratops, Stegosaurus, Apatosaurus and Edmontosaurus – represents one of the primary dinosaur archetypes that have been popularised for over a century. They are THE dinosaurs, and their long shadows obscure recently discovered species that have led palaeontologists to revise our understanding of dinosaur evolution and relationships.
Take Linhenykus, for example. Who – other than palaeontologists – knows what an alvarezsaur is? From a writer's perspective, it is easier to play up its tenuous connection to Tyrannosaurus than spend a paragraph explaining the dinosaur's unique nature. It doesn't fit in the already established set of familiar dinosaur shapes, so a well-known dinosaur is used to make the introduction.
As science writers, we face the difficult task of condensing technical details into compelling, easily accessible stories that will hopefully catch the eyes of readers before they click over to another webpage. That doesn't mean that we should shrink from accuracy. We are not doing our jobs if we simply refer every sharp-toothed dinosaur to the tyrant family because Tyrannosaurus provides a solid hook. If we fall victim to this trope, we perpetuate a cycle in which no one will understand what an alvarezsaur is because we never explain it and we never explain it because we don't think anyone will understand.
There will always be more dinosaur discoveries than available media space to disseminate their details. That is true of any scientific discipline, and it is why context has become so vital. Our reliance on Tyrannosaurus as an attention-grabbing anchor is just one symptom of a more pervasive affliction in which brevity and page views are valued over placing news in context.
Palaeontologists are not exempt, either. Too often – from grant applications to press releases – we have relied upon the cultural cachet of Tyrannosaurus to get attention.
There is more to palaeontology than Tyrannosaurus rex. Just as the tyrant king was just one member of a rich and diverse dinosaurian family, so are new scientific discoveries intimately connected to the ongoing interrogation of nature. We would do well to remember that.
Brian Switek is the author of Written in Stone: Evolution, the Fossil Record, and Our Place in Nature. He writes for the WIRED Science blog Laelaps and Smithsonian magazine's Dinosaur Tracking
References
Brusatte, SL et al (2010). Tyrannosaur Paleobiology: New Research on Ancient Exemplar Organisms. Science (New York, N.Y.); 329 (5998): 1481-1485. DOI: 10.1126/science.1193304
Hone, D et al (2011). A new tyrannosaurine theropod, Zhuchengtyrannus magnus is named based on a maxilla and dentary. Cretaceous Research (in press). DOI: 10.1016/j.cretres.2011.03.005
Martinez, R et al (2011). A Basal Dinosaur from the Dawn of the Dinosaur Era in Southwestern Pangaea. Science; 331 (6014): 206-210. DOI: 10.1126/science.1198467
Nesbitt, S et al (2011). A small alvarezsaurid from the eastern Gobi Desert offers insight into evolutionary patterns in the Alvarezsauroidea. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology; 31 (1): 144-153. DOI: 10.1080/02724634.2011.540053
Monday, April 18, 2011
UC Davis dinosaur eye bone study offers new view
SFGate: UC Davis dinosaur eye bone study offers new view
In the long-ago age of the dinosaurs, the smaller, fierce and predatory beasts were night hunters, stalking and seizing their unwary prey in the dark, while giant plant eaters of the same era browsed both day and night in order to fill the energy needs of their huge bodies.
This new picture of dinosaur behavior - based on studies of the fossil bony structures of their eyes - has been drawn by paleontologists at UC Davis, and it challenges some long-held ideas about the way dinosaurs lived.
Lars Schmitz, a postdoctoral researcher, and Ryosuke Motani, an evolutionary biologist at Davis, developed an ingenious approach to their study.
They measured the fossil eye bones of 33 varied dinosaurs, including those that lived on land like velociraptor of movie fame and archaeopteryx, the first flying bird, as well as diplodocus, the long-necked land giant that gorged on leaves and ferns and all sorts of other vegetation.
They also examined the eye bones of 164 modern birds, because the birds - as dinosaur experts now maintain - are, in fact, living dinosaurs.
Within the bony eye sockets of all those animals is a circular bone called the scleral ring; the ring is larger around large eyes and smaller when eyes are smaller. Big eyes let in more light allowing animals to see in the dark; smaller eyes are all that's needed to see clearly in daylight.
So Schmitz and Motani measured the scleral rings in all the fossil beasts they could find, and in the modern birds, too, and they concluded that the bony rings are excellent clues to the feeding habits of the dinosaurs.
In the movie "Jurassic Park," the savage velociraptors were pictured as hunting their prey only at night, but that image annoyed many scientists, for conventional wisdom held that the carnivorous beasts only attacked by day.
But velociraptor fossils show large scleral rings in their skulls - suggesting their large eyes helped them to prey on the small mammals for food at night. So, it seems, the makers of "Jurassic Park" were right.
And diplodocus, the huge plant eaters with the long, snake-like necks, had smaller scleral rings, indicating they must have been actively feeding most of the day and evening - except for the hottest sunshine hours when their bodies needed to avoid overheating, the scientists concluded.
Flying dinosaurs like archaeopteryx were daylight hunters, the analysis showed, although some modern birds that hunt at night have large scleral rings, Schmitz said.
Mark Goodwin, assistant director of the Museum of Paleontology at UC Berkeley and an expert on dinosaur bone growth, said the Davis scientists developed "a creative and innovative technique" to infer the activity patterns and behavior of the dinosaurs.
The researchers also have shown that earlier notions of dinosaurs as daylight hunters "may be, at best, very simplistic and most likely not entirely accurate," Goodwin said.
"I like the study," he said.
Schmitz and Motani published two reports of their study last week, in Science Express and in the journal Evolution.
In the long-ago age of the dinosaurs, the smaller, fierce and predatory beasts were night hunters, stalking and seizing their unwary prey in the dark, while giant plant eaters of the same era browsed both day and night in order to fill the energy needs of their huge bodies.
This new picture of dinosaur behavior - based on studies of the fossil bony structures of their eyes - has been drawn by paleontologists at UC Davis, and it challenges some long-held ideas about the way dinosaurs lived.
Lars Schmitz, a postdoctoral researcher, and Ryosuke Motani, an evolutionary biologist at Davis, developed an ingenious approach to their study.
They measured the fossil eye bones of 33 varied dinosaurs, including those that lived on land like velociraptor of movie fame and archaeopteryx, the first flying bird, as well as diplodocus, the long-necked land giant that gorged on leaves and ferns and all sorts of other vegetation.
They also examined the eye bones of 164 modern birds, because the birds - as dinosaur experts now maintain - are, in fact, living dinosaurs.
Within the bony eye sockets of all those animals is a circular bone called the scleral ring; the ring is larger around large eyes and smaller when eyes are smaller. Big eyes let in more light allowing animals to see in the dark; smaller eyes are all that's needed to see clearly in daylight.
So Schmitz and Motani measured the scleral rings in all the fossil beasts they could find, and in the modern birds, too, and they concluded that the bony rings are excellent clues to the feeding habits of the dinosaurs.
In the movie "Jurassic Park," the savage velociraptors were pictured as hunting their prey only at night, but that image annoyed many scientists, for conventional wisdom held that the carnivorous beasts only attacked by day.
But velociraptor fossils show large scleral rings in their skulls - suggesting their large eyes helped them to prey on the small mammals for food at night. So, it seems, the makers of "Jurassic Park" were right.
And diplodocus, the huge plant eaters with the long, snake-like necks, had smaller scleral rings, indicating they must have been actively feeding most of the day and evening - except for the hottest sunshine hours when their bodies needed to avoid overheating, the scientists concluded.
Flying dinosaurs like archaeopteryx were daylight hunters, the analysis showed, although some modern birds that hunt at night have large scleral rings, Schmitz said.
Mark Goodwin, assistant director of the Museum of Paleontology at UC Berkeley and an expert on dinosaur bone growth, said the Davis scientists developed "a creative and innovative technique" to infer the activity patterns and behavior of the dinosaurs.
The researchers also have shown that earlier notions of dinosaurs as daylight hunters "may be, at best, very simplistic and most likely not entirely accurate," Goodwin said.
"I like the study," he said.
Schmitz and Motani published two reports of their study last week, in Science Express and in the journal Evolution.
Dino Easter Egg Hunt At The Dinosaur Place
http://www.thedinosaurplace.com/
1650 Hartford-New London Turnpike
Oakdale, CT 06370
Green Outdoors: Dino Easter Egg Hunt At The Dinosaur Place
The Dinosaur Place is taking a prehistoric spin on the traditional egg hunt. This year, guests will search the adventure park for over 500 Dino Eggs during the Dino Easter Egg Hunt, being held at 10:15 a.m. on Saturday, April 23.
“We are so excited for our young guests to participate in this exciting egg hunt,” says Linda Phillips, Chief Executive Officer. “Some of our eggs are quite large as you might expect for a dinosaur. We can’t wait to see the kids faces when they open them. We are also revealing our newest edition to our lineup of interactive characters that morning, a baby “Monty” dinosaur modeled after our very own Monty the T-Rex dinosaur”.
How the egg hunt works: Each age group will be escorted to three different areas of the outdoor adventure to hunt for dinosaur eggs of varied sizes. Over 500 eggs will be available. Each egg will contain two surprises, a baby dinosaur, and a coupon which may be redeemed inside at the Egg Redemption Center for another prize. Children are to take their eggs to the Dino Egg Redemption Center located inside the Shop at Nature’s Art. Dinosaurs contained within the eggs and associated prizes are yours to keep. Once prizes are collected, everyone may return to the outdoor adventure for a fun filled day.
Egg Hunt Schedule – Sat, April 23rd
9:30am Park opens early for Egg Hunt participants.
Upon entry, each participant will receive a handstamp allowing in/out access for the day at the Outdoor Adventure. Special Egg Hunt All Day Outdoor Adventure Admission: $14.99 per child participant. Adults – $12.99. Normal admission prices apply after Egg Hunt.
10:00am DinoMights Special Welcome
Our very own DinoMights, Lady Lava, Jurassic Joe and Ranger Rex will introduce a newly hatched, special baby dinosaur, Monty “Junior”, our newest interactive character to the Dinosaur Place.
10:15am Egg Hunt Begins
To ensure that everyone gets a chance to find awesome Dino Eggs, the hunt will be available for three different age groups at three different locations -
Friday, April 15, 2011
Dangerous Dinos Came Out After Dark
US News: Science: Dangerous Dinos Came Out After Dark
By Daniel Strain, Science News
As if velociraptors weren’t scary enough. A new analysis of dinosaur-era skulls suggests that at least one of these birdlike predators, along with many of its ancient brethren, hunted by night.
Not all extinct archosaurs—dinosaurs and their close relatives—loved to bask in the sun. Like other animal groups, these ancient creatures were up at all hours, researchers from the University of California, Davis report online April 14 in Science. And just like modern mammals, predatory dinos seem to have preferred prowling the night, while herbivores grazed during the day and into the evening.
“We shouldn’t be surprised that there were predatory dinosaurs skulking around the shadows,” says Lawrence Witmer, a paleobiologist with Ohio University in Athens. “The surprising thing about this study is we could tell.”
The UC Davis team could tell nocturnal from daytime dinos by looking deep into their eyes. In living animals, that’s easy. Nocturnal critters’ eyes usually have wide pupils, for instance, but are relatively shallow. That means a cat’s peepers let in lots of light, but can’t take detailed pictures. Dino fossils, however, don’t come with mushy eye tissue. So researchers have the much harder task of inferring visual prowess from bones.
Study coauthors Lars Schmitz, an evolutionary biologist, and Ryosuke Motani, a paleobiologist, started with living animals—lizards and birds. They looked at the sizes of eye sockets and scleral rings—thin, bony layers that sit, in these creatures, roughly where the whites of a mammal’s eyes would be. Taken together, these structures appeared to predict activity patterns.
Then Schmitz and Motani inspected skulls of 33 archosaurs, spotting eight dinos that seemed to prefer the sun and nine with eyes better suited to dim light. Others appeared to do well in a mix of sunlight and moonlight. And these ancient beasts seem to fall in line with the same patterns that organize many living vertebrates. Like most birds, flying archosaurs, including the original early bird Archaeopteryx lithographica, tended to soar by day. Herbivores probably dined both during the day and in dim light, much like modern cows. And in true horror movie style, many predators, such as Velociraptor mongoliensis of Jurassic Park fame, seem to have stalked their prey at night. “The velociraptor was nocturnal in that movie, and it actually fits,” Schmitz says.
Evolutionary biologist Margaret Hall has doubts about whether scientists can infer nocturnal behavior from the kind of bony evidence used by the UC Davis team. But she would not be surprised if dinosaurs skulked in the shadows. Every living animal group has night and day ambassadors, says Hall, of Midwestern University in Glendale, Ariz. Why should archosaurs be any different?
The new study supports current appreciations of dino diversity, says Tony Fiorillo, curator of paleontology at the Dallas Museum of Natural History. Many species don’t fit the old notion that dinosaurs moved slowly and depended entirely on the sun for warmth. He’s confident that perceptions will evolve even further. “The field of dinosaur paleontology is so active and engaged right now that we won’t have to wait 10 years,” Fiorillo says. “At some levels, it changes from year to year.”
By Daniel Strain, Science News
As if velociraptors weren’t scary enough. A new analysis of dinosaur-era skulls suggests that at least one of these birdlike predators, along with many of its ancient brethren, hunted by night.
Not all extinct archosaurs—dinosaurs and their close relatives—loved to bask in the sun. Like other animal groups, these ancient creatures were up at all hours, researchers from the University of California, Davis report online April 14 in Science. And just like modern mammals, predatory dinos seem to have preferred prowling the night, while herbivores grazed during the day and into the evening.
“We shouldn’t be surprised that there were predatory dinosaurs skulking around the shadows,” says Lawrence Witmer, a paleobiologist with Ohio University in Athens. “The surprising thing about this study is we could tell.”
The UC Davis team could tell nocturnal from daytime dinos by looking deep into their eyes. In living animals, that’s easy. Nocturnal critters’ eyes usually have wide pupils, for instance, but are relatively shallow. That means a cat’s peepers let in lots of light, but can’t take detailed pictures. Dino fossils, however, don’t come with mushy eye tissue. So researchers have the much harder task of inferring visual prowess from bones.
Study coauthors Lars Schmitz, an evolutionary biologist, and Ryosuke Motani, a paleobiologist, started with living animals—lizards and birds. They looked at the sizes of eye sockets and scleral rings—thin, bony layers that sit, in these creatures, roughly where the whites of a mammal’s eyes would be. Taken together, these structures appeared to predict activity patterns.
Then Schmitz and Motani inspected skulls of 33 archosaurs, spotting eight dinos that seemed to prefer the sun and nine with eyes better suited to dim light. Others appeared to do well in a mix of sunlight and moonlight. And these ancient beasts seem to fall in line with the same patterns that organize many living vertebrates. Like most birds, flying archosaurs, including the original early bird Archaeopteryx lithographica, tended to soar by day. Herbivores probably dined both during the day and in dim light, much like modern cows. And in true horror movie style, many predators, such as Velociraptor mongoliensis of Jurassic Park fame, seem to have stalked their prey at night. “The velociraptor was nocturnal in that movie, and it actually fits,” Schmitz says.
Evolutionary biologist Margaret Hall has doubts about whether scientists can infer nocturnal behavior from the kind of bony evidence used by the UC Davis team. But she would not be surprised if dinosaurs skulked in the shadows. Every living animal group has night and day ambassadors, says Hall, of Midwestern University in Glendale, Ariz. Why should archosaurs be any different?
The new study supports current appreciations of dino diversity, says Tony Fiorillo, curator of paleontology at the Dallas Museum of Natural History. Many species don’t fit the old notion that dinosaurs moved slowly and depended entirely on the sun for warmth. He’s confident that perceptions will evolve even further. “The field of dinosaur paleontology is so active and engaged right now that we won’t have to wait 10 years,” Fiorillo says. “At some levels, it changes from year to year.”
Thursday, April 14, 2011
How Dinosaurs Got So Huge
Live Science: How Dinosaurs Got So Huge
Among dinosaurs, the biggest of the big is Argentinosaurus. This long-necked, puny-headed creature is a member of a group of giants called sauropods. This particular extinct creature measured as much as 140 feet (43 meters) long and weighed up to 90 tons (82 metric tons).
Beyond inspiring awe, a creature of these proportions inspires all sorts of questions: Why and how did these dinosaurs, which started out relatively small, become so big? How did they feed and maintain their large bodies? A new exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City explores the mysteries surrounding their enormity.
The exhibit is dominated by a model of Mamenchisaurus, a smaller relative to Argentinosaurus. The skin is peeled back on half of the model to allow a peek into the animal's physiology. On the left side of the abdomen, projected images show body processes, such as the path of fresh air into the lungs and a birdlike system of air-storage sacs.
Large sauropods needed more air and more food than smaller creatures. A young adult Mamenchisaurus, for example, needed to consume 100,000 calories a day to maintain itself. This nutrition came from leaves and other plant material they snipped and stripped before gulping their meal down.
The long neck — for Mamenchisaurus it was 30 feet (9 meters) — made their enormous body size workable, allowing them to the reach to feed themselves efficiently. Sauropods used their necks to reach food without moving their more lumbering bodies. And in turn, the long neck — itself very light — was possible because of the dinosaur's small head, with the largest of sauropod brains weighing only 4 ounces (113 grams) as compared with the 48-ounce (1.4 kilograms) human brain.
The sauropod habit of gulping down its dinner is also crucial, according to P. Martin Sander, a co-curator of the exhibit and professor of vertebrate paleontology at the University of Bonn.
"Chewing limits body size," Sander said, explaining that animals that rely on chewing, like many mammals, depend on big molars and muscles to grind up their food to make nutrients available. As an animal gets larger, it needs progressively more energy, and eventually this cumbersome system can't provide it with enough calories.
Sauropods, meanwhile, had teeth, but they did not chew. The earliest sauropods had spoon-shaped teeth that made for a powerful bite, and later, some evolved pencil-tip-shaped teeth that functioned like rakes, stripping away leaves and needles from trees.
Another factor has kept mammals from reaching sauropod size: reproduction. Sauropods could lay 150 eggs in a year, making them more capable of bouncing back from a given catastrophe than mammals, which invest much more in fewer offspring. This means sauropods could exist at a much lower density in a given area than mammals without being wiped out, according to Sander. Lower density living makes larger body size possible because each individual has access to more resources.
"It's pretty clear what the limiting factors are in body size, that's what we've learned from studying dinosaurs," he said.
Even sauropods did not reach the theoretical maximum for size for land animals, which has been estimated at 150 to 200 tons, Sander said.
Baby sauropods did not start out large. They emerged from eggs smaller than a soccer ball and grew at astonishing rates of up to 12 pounds (5.4 kg) per day, according to Michael Novacek, a senior vice president at the museum. This rapid growth rate implies a high rate of metabolism, and therefore, warm- bloodedness, for at least a period during the sauropods' life span, according to Novacek.
There is no question that sauropods were successful: They walked the Earth for 140 million years.
Exhibit Details:
The World's Largest Dinosaurs
April 16, 2011 through Jan. 2, 2012
American Museum of Natural History in New York City
http://www.amnh.org/
Among dinosaurs, the biggest of the big is Argentinosaurus. This long-necked, puny-headed creature is a member of a group of giants called sauropods. This particular extinct creature measured as much as 140 feet (43 meters) long and weighed up to 90 tons (82 metric tons).
Beyond inspiring awe, a creature of these proportions inspires all sorts of questions: Why and how did these dinosaurs, which started out relatively small, become so big? How did they feed and maintain their large bodies? A new exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City explores the mysteries surrounding their enormity.
The exhibit is dominated by a model of Mamenchisaurus, a smaller relative to Argentinosaurus. The skin is peeled back on half of the model to allow a peek into the animal's physiology. On the left side of the abdomen, projected images show body processes, such as the path of fresh air into the lungs and a birdlike system of air-storage sacs.
Large sauropods needed more air and more food than smaller creatures. A young adult Mamenchisaurus, for example, needed to consume 100,000 calories a day to maintain itself. This nutrition came from leaves and other plant material they snipped and stripped before gulping their meal down.
The long neck — for Mamenchisaurus it was 30 feet (9 meters) — made their enormous body size workable, allowing them to the reach to feed themselves efficiently. Sauropods used their necks to reach food without moving their more lumbering bodies. And in turn, the long neck — itself very light — was possible because of the dinosaur's small head, with the largest of sauropod brains weighing only 4 ounces (113 grams) as compared with the 48-ounce (1.4 kilograms) human brain.
The sauropod habit of gulping down its dinner is also crucial, according to P. Martin Sander, a co-curator of the exhibit and professor of vertebrate paleontology at the University of Bonn.
"Chewing limits body size," Sander said, explaining that animals that rely on chewing, like many mammals, depend on big molars and muscles to grind up their food to make nutrients available. As an animal gets larger, it needs progressively more energy, and eventually this cumbersome system can't provide it with enough calories.
Sauropods, meanwhile, had teeth, but they did not chew. The earliest sauropods had spoon-shaped teeth that made for a powerful bite, and later, some evolved pencil-tip-shaped teeth that functioned like rakes, stripping away leaves and needles from trees.
Another factor has kept mammals from reaching sauropod size: reproduction. Sauropods could lay 150 eggs in a year, making them more capable of bouncing back from a given catastrophe than mammals, which invest much more in fewer offspring. This means sauropods could exist at a much lower density in a given area than mammals without being wiped out, according to Sander. Lower density living makes larger body size possible because each individual has access to more resources.
"It's pretty clear what the limiting factors are in body size, that's what we've learned from studying dinosaurs," he said.
Even sauropods did not reach the theoretical maximum for size for land animals, which has been estimated at 150 to 200 tons, Sander said.
Baby sauropods did not start out large. They emerged from eggs smaller than a soccer ball and grew at astonishing rates of up to 12 pounds (5.4 kg) per day, according to Michael Novacek, a senior vice president at the museum. This rapid growth rate implies a high rate of metabolism, and therefore, warm- bloodedness, for at least a period during the sauropods' life span, according to Novacek.
There is no question that sauropods were successful: They walked the Earth for 140 million years.
Exhibit Details:
The World's Largest Dinosaurs
April 16, 2011 through Jan. 2, 2012
American Museum of Natural History in New York City
http://www.amnh.org/
Smithsonian Paleobiologist: Discover new species of Dinosaur, New Mexico dig
Washington DC Examiner: Smithsonian Paleobiologist: Discover new species of Dinosaur, New Mexico dig
Smithsonian Institution team of scientists has discovered a new species revealed in a fossilized dinosaur skull and neck vertebrae, an evolutionary link between two groups of dinosaurs. The new species, Daemonosaurus chauliodus, was discovered at Ghost Ranch, New Mexico. The team’s findings are published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, Wednesday, April 13.
“Various features of the skull and neck in Daemonosaurus indicate that it was intermediate between the earliest known predatory dinosaurs from South America and more advanced theropod dinosaurs,” said Hans Sues, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History and lead author of the team’s findings.
“One such feature is the presence of cavities on some of the neck vertebrae related to the structure of the respiratory system.”This new discovery shows that there is still much to be learned about the early evolution of dinosaurs. “The continued exploration of even well-studied regions like the American Southwest will still yield remarkable new fossil finds,” Sues said.
These early predatory dinosaurs evolutionary position was controversial due to a gap in fossil records between present and later theropod (beast-footed) dinosaurs. The Smithsonian team’s discovery of Daemonosaurus chauliodus filled this gap.
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Only the skull and neck of Daemonosaurus were found, the total length of the new species is unknown. The dinosaur’s skull is narrow and relatively deep, from the tip of its snout to the back of the skull and has proportionately large eye sockets.
The upper jaw has large, forward-slanted front teeth, and this feature helped to name the new species. The name Daemonosaurus (Greek for evil spirit) and “sauros” (meaning lizard or reptile), because it was found on the Ghost Ranch in a Southwestern state.
The species name chauliodus (Greek for “buck-toothed”) refers to this species’ big slanted front teeth, and dated on timeline in latest Triassic Period immediately before the Jurassic Period, therefore, dated 205 million years ago, Daemonosaurus (evil spirit lizard), and the most primitive theropod species existed before the 'evil spirit lizard'.
The discovery altered all previous beliefs of earliest dinosaurs vanishing millions of years earlier. The skull and neck vertebrae of Daemonosaurus revealed several features similar to those in later neo-theropods —the consequential group after the Daemonsaurus chauliodus on the evolutionary timeline; therefore, a missing link and a new species.
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Desert Detours: World’s Biggest Dinosaurs
HiDesertStar: Desert Detours: World’s Biggest Dinosaurs
Story and photos by Cpl. M. C. Nerl
Combat Correspondent
Warning: If you have not seen Jurassic Park in a while, do not visit this place until you obtain a DVD copy of the film. I am not advertising for it, this place is just full of “awesome,” and will compel you to run out and rent or buy the movie.
With that said, this week’s edition of Desert Detours has taken us back in time, not only to my own childhood, but also to the olden days of taking a road trip across country with the family, not to mention the pre-historic era of the dinosaurs.
The World’s Biggest Dinosaurs are located in “scenic” Cabazon, Calif., and were featured in “Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure.” This is what truly drew me to the attraction.
Mr. Rex, a 65-foot-tall Tyrannosaurus Rex, and Dinny, a 45-foot-tall Apatosaurus are the product of a former Knott’s Berry Farm sculptor, by the name of Claude Bell. The later addition of the robotic dinosaur exhibit only added to the place’s coolness.
Although Bell passed away, and ownership of the dinosaurs has changed hands, they are still bringing joy to people of all ages, and trust me - even at the ripe old age of 22, I enjoyed the hell out of them.
The exhibit has an awesome retro feel to it, and reeks of 1970s America and Jimmy Carter. The restaurant next door does too, but we will get to that later.
Throughout the entire course of exhibits, it was hard to miss certain religious connotations and facts contradicting evolution and some scientific theories - so, if you’re a serious evolutionist, be warned.
The robotic dinosaurs are awesome, and always on the move. In addition to that, the gift shop has stuff you totally know you wanted to have when you were 10 or 12 or 22.
The outside portion of the robotic exhibit is pretty neat too, even though the grand tour ends not going out, but “up” Mr. Rex, a dinosaur sculpture. Truth is, the stairway really leads up the side, but it makes for a good picture from certain angles.
The inside of Mr. Rex is quite fun. His walls are lined with cave paintings, fun interesting facts and smaller models of other dinosaurs. The view at the top is especially cool. It’s probably how it looked inside Godzilla’s mouth in that awful remake back in like, 2000, (seriously you know he would have crushed that cab in his mouth. There is NO WAY those people would have survived).
Dinny is open seven days a week, while Mr. Rex and the other exhibits are only open on weekends.
The military-friendly owners of the site were kind enough to offer a discounted price of $5 to access the super-cool, pre-historic world on weekends.
The 24-hour Wheel Inn Restaurant next door is a whole different monster - one delicious monster.
The Rex and Dino burgers come in multiple stacks of properly-cooked, delicious meat patties at a pretty good price, considering how much food you get.
Don’t worry though, unless you’re near or over your height and weight limit. If you are, you may have to go on a dino-sized run after eating all those calories and carbs.
Overall, if you don’t mind the underlying conflict between the theories of creation and evolution, the dinos area is a great roadside attraction to check out on your way to San Diego. It’s also a good afternoon pit stop on your way back to the Combat Center after a long weekend.
The World’s Largest Dinosaurs get 3 out of 5 palm trees. They’d probably get four if they sold beer.
Editor’s Note: “Desert Detours” is a weekly series exploring opportunities for Marines and sailors from a firsthand perspective. All material included therein is the opinion of the writer and does not imply an endorsement by the U.S. Marine Corps or the Department of Defense.
Giants Who Scarfed Down Fast-Food Feasts
The New York Times - Science: Giants Who Scarfed Down Fast-Food Feasts
Nothing in the dinosaur world was quite like the sauropods. They were huge, some unbelievably gigantic, the biggest animals ever to lumber across the land, consuming everything in sight. Their necks were much longer than a giraffe’s, their tails just about as long and their bodies like an elephant’s, only much more so.
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Wide-eyed first graders are not the only ones fascinated by sauropods, particularly those outsize friends Apatosaurus (formerly known as Brontosaurus), Brachiosaurus and Diplodocus. Scientists are redoubling their study of the unusual biology of these amazing plant-eaters. They are asking questions not unlike, in spirit, those of schoolchildren.
By what physiological strategy of heart, lungs and metabolism were the largest of sauropod species able to thrive over a span of 140 million years? How did they possibly get enough to eat to grow so hefty, to lengths of 15 to 150 feet and estimated weights of up to 70 tons? A mere elephant has to eat 18 hours a day to get its fill. Even in the Mesozoic era, there were only 24 hours in a day.
For more than seven years, a group of German and Swiss scientists has made a concerted effort to test the limits of body size in terrestrial vertebrates and, in the process, try to answer these and other questions related to the enigma of sauropod gigantism. Findings by many other scientists have been reviewed and analyzed, then tested with new experiments and more observations.
“We actually have been re-engineering a sauropod,” said P. Martin Sander, a paleontologist at the University of Bonn and leader of the research team. “We are looking for physical advantages it had over other large animals and assessing various hypotheses.”
One clear explanation has emerged: These were the ultimate fast-food gourmands. Reaching all around with their long necks, these giants gulped down enormous meals. With no molars in their relatively small heads, they were unequipped for serious chewing. They let the digestive juices of their capacious bodies break down their heaping intake while they just kept packing away more chow.
This was seemingly the only efficient way for sauropods to satisfy their appetites and to diversify into some 120 genera, beginning more than 200 million years ago. They eventually dominated the landscape for a long run through the Cretaceous, only to die out with all nonavian dinosaurs 65 million years ago.
The German-Swiss team of paleontologists, biologists and other scientists, financed by the German Research Foundation, has now weighed in with its comprehensive report “Biology of the Sauropod Dinosaurs,” a book published last month by Indiana University Press. Dr. Sander is one of the book’s editors and also guest curator of a major exhibition, “The World’s Largest Dinosaurs,” opening Saturday at the American Museum of Natural History in Manhattan and scheduled to run until Jan. 2, 2012.
A centerpiece of the show will be a life-size model of a 60-foot female Mamenchisaurus, whose fossilized bones were discovered in China. An early and not especially large sauropod, it lived 160 million years ago, laid eggs and possibly lived in a herd. It weighed 13 tons and ate 1,150 pounds of vegetation a day. The model focuses attention on the animal’s 30-foot neck and small skull and jaws to illustrate the remarkable biology and behavior of sauropods.
Early in their investigations, material scientists in the German-Swiss group proposed that sauropod bone had superior mechanical properties compared with large mammal bone, which would have given these dinosaurs stronger skeletons to support heftier bodies. The hypothesis was tossed aside after tests showed that sauropod and cow bone tissue had the same strength.
Then the investigators found no evidence that availability of food and the physical and chemical conditions in the Mesozoic era were sufficiently different to have accounted for sauropod gigantism. If anything, the environment then was probably less favorable for plant and animal life than it is today. So the researchers directed their efforts to a detailed examination of the biological makeup of these giants.
Dr. Sander noted in the book that the new study was one of the few dinosaur projects in which paleontologists were outnumbered by nonpaleontologists, mainly biologists. Mark A. Norell, a dinosaur paleontologist at the American Museum and principal curator of the exhibition, remarked, “This shows how biological our field has become.”
In a recent interview televised from his office in Bonn, Dr. Sander pointed to an illustration of the dinosaur’s anatomy. “What makes a sauropod a sauropod is its most conspicuous feature, its enormously long neck,” he said.
The animals had the longest necks for their body size of any dinosaur known. Dr. Sander and his colleagues think that two of the sauropod’s primitive inheritances probably account for this. One was the absence of mastication, and the other its egg-laying reproduction.
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A small head, of course, took a load off the sauropod neck, presumably allowing it to grow longer. Even so, the neck had to be bolstered with more vertebrae than mammals have. These bones are light for their large size, because they are hollowed out with many air pockets. Mammals, even the giraffe with a six-foot neck, are limited to no more than seven neck vertebrae; the Mamenchisaurus neck had 19.
The sauropod’s neck became what the hook-and-ladder is to a firefighter: a means of extended reach that could be critical. It gave these animals an ability to graze a much wider radius of ground vegetation without moving a step. Dr. Norell said that biomechanical studies indicated that the long necks may not have able to stretch higher to browse in trees, as giraffes do.
In any event, sauropods could outcompete other plant eaters and over time, as one scientist wrote, “enter the niche of giants.” And their consequent gigantism was perhaps their best defense against predators, intimidating even the neighborhood T. rex.
Sauropods took a long while evolving their body plan, which, in silhouette, became the ubiquitous logo of Sinclair oil back in the mid-20th century. But the retention of another of its primitive features, egg-laying, increases the number of offspring and thus improves the chances of long-term survival of a family of species — and time enough to innovate.
In a 2008 summary in the journal Science of the project’s preliminary findings, Dr. Sander and Marcus Clauss, a dinosaur specialist at the University of Zurich, wrote that sauropods gradually evolved what appeared to be a high growth rate, a birdlike respiratory system and a flexible metabolic rate.
One conclusion is that their very young grew rapidly: A human baby doubles in weight in about five months, a sauropod in only five days; and an adolescent sauropod put on 3,500 pounds a year. These are growth rates higher than in today’s reptiles. They enabled these dinosaurs to reach sexual maturity in their second decade of life and full size in their third.
Stopping at an exhibit being readied for the new museum show, Dr. Norell pointed to an illustration of how heart rates are related to an organism’s size. The heart of a mouse beats 700 times a minute; a human, 72; an elephant, 28; a sauropod, less than 10.
Dr. Sander cited the bird-lung model as an important innovation. If correct, he said in the interview, this and other evidence suggests that sauropods were warm-blooded to some extent. “If an elephant had birdlike lungs, it would grow even bigger,” he speculated.
The fact that dinosaurs’ distant relative the crocodile has a respiratory system somewhat like a bird’s suggested to scientists that it might also have been true of sauropods. All the air-sac cavities in their long neck and torso resemble those in birds. Also, it might explain how animals with such long windpipes managed to draw in and absorb sufficient oxygen.
In time, however, sauropods seemed to feast on their enormous size. Writing in the project’s book, Dr. Clauss said that these giants “might represent a rare example of herbivores that actually benefit from an increase in body size, in terms of a larger gut and a longer retention of food in that gut.”
The bigger they got, in other words, the greater their capacity to store vast food intake in digestive chambers. Galapagos tortoises, which eat and don’t chew, have stomach chambers that hold food for up to 11 days, giving microbes time to break it down and extract the nourishment.
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Get Science News From The New York Times » Dr. Clauss of Zurich and Jürgen Hummel of the University of Bonn conducted fermentation experiments mixing micro-organisms with contents of sheep stomachs and various plants, including horsetail plants, cycads, pine needles and ginkgo leaves known to have been growing when sauropods foraged. From this and other evidence, they estimate that the giants probably took two weeks to digest an all-day dinner.
Other scientists, who are not involved in the study, said the experiments and analysis by the German-Swiss group provide an impressive body of knowledge about how some dinosaurs grew so big and why sauropods, in evolutionary terms, were so successful over a span of 140 million years and a global range.
“I’m not sure they’ve hit the nail on the head, always,” Peter Dodson, a University of Pennsylvania paleontologist, said of Dr. Sander’s team. “But they have certainly a number of important insights.”
Dr. Dodson agreed with the researchers on the long neck’s critical place in sauropod biology and the growth rates of sauropod bones that appear to show the animals had metabolic rates closer to those of mammals than those of reptiles. But this does not necessarily mean, he said, that sauropods were fully warm-blooded.
In the team’s book, Dr. Clauss conceded that there was debate on the metabolic rates and a lack of consensus on the nature of the sauropod cardiovascular system. He noted that among many scientists a direct link between the sauropod respiratory system and gigantism “is not yet compelling.”
The research, Dr. Dodson added, raises the related question of why mammals have never approached in size the larger sauropods. Some extinct Asian rhinoceros species that reached weights of 15 tons were the closest mammals came. “They were to mammals what sauropods were to dinosaurs,” he said. “But it was not a successful body plan in their time, an idea that went nowhere.”
Paul Sereno, a dinosaur fossil hunter at the University of Chicago, said the new research “is very valuable,” but he doubted there was enough hard evidence to support the bird-lung hypothesis. Still, he said, the sauropod “is an incredible animal, one of the best land animals that’s been invented.”
Monday, April 11, 2011
Researchers find remains of herbivorous dinosaurs in Madhya Pradesh
The Hindu: Researchers find remains of herbivorous dinosaurs in Madhya Pradesh
Herbivorous dinosaurs, along with crocodiles, existed in the Narmada valley around eight crore years ago, according to researchers, who have found remains of these two animals near here.
“We have found the bones of herbivorous dinosaurs and the jaw of a crocodile during excavations at neighbouring Dhar district,” Vishal Verma, head of the researchers group Mangal Panchaytan Parishad, said.
A close look at the crocodile’s jaw indicates that it was 15 feet long, he said.
Mr. Verma said their organisation, which had been conducting research in the region for the last couple of years, has during excavation found dinosaur eggs and bones in the past.
Madhya Pradesh government already has plans to set up a dinosaur fossil park in Dhar district.
According to Mr. Verma, the Narmada valley in western Madhya Pradesh has been a witness to volcanic eruptions and other activities, which had brought tremendous changes in its environs.
Studies also suggest that the area was once an ocean, which disappeared later, he added.
Herbivorous dinosaurs, along with crocodiles, existed in the Narmada valley around eight crore years ago, according to researchers, who have found remains of these two animals near here.
“We have found the bones of herbivorous dinosaurs and the jaw of a crocodile during excavations at neighbouring Dhar district,” Vishal Verma, head of the researchers group Mangal Panchaytan Parishad, said.
A close look at the crocodile’s jaw indicates that it was 15 feet long, he said.
Mr. Verma said their organisation, which had been conducting research in the region for the last couple of years, has during excavation found dinosaur eggs and bones in the past.
Madhya Pradesh government already has plans to set up a dinosaur fossil park in Dhar district.
According to Mr. Verma, the Narmada valley in western Madhya Pradesh has been a witness to volcanic eruptions and other activities, which had brought tremendous changes in its environs.
Studies also suggest that the area was once an ocean, which disappeared later, he added.
Dinosaurs! An awe-inspiring look at the life of these gigantic creatures
NYDailyNews.com: Dinosaurs! An awe-inspiring look at the life of these gigantic creatures
The newest — and probably largest — New Yorker goes by the name of Mamenchisaurus,
and just as for many New Yorkers, moving to her new digs has been a battle.
Mamenchisaurus is the tractor-trailer-size star of "The World's Largest Dinosaurs," an exhibit opening at the American Museum of Natural History on Saturday.
The colossal creature, a female, took 100 people two years to create. She's an awesome example of long-necked, long-tailed sauropods.
But there's a reason for the show-stopping size.
"It's made in the way that those old invisible human models used to be," explains the exhibit's curator, Mark Norell. "One side of it appears as the way the animal would have looked in life. But on the other side, the skin is pulled back to reveal muscles, bones, organs and the mechanics of the inside of the animal and how it worked.
"We actually animate a lot of the internal organs by projecting on the outside of it, so that we can talk about the different layers of the anatomy and see things like the lungs work and heart beat and food passing through the animal," he adds. "So it's a very dynamic, lively sort of thing."
The hulking herbivore — that's right, sauropods got that big eating plants alone — is made out of polyurethane, synthetic material commonly used as a packing foam.
"We constructed it by sculpting a small version of it about 6 feet long," Norell says. "Then that was laser-scanned, and molds for the full-size model were then prototyped off of that."
The Mamenchisaurus stands 11 feet tall and stretches 60 feet long, but she isn't even half as big as some sauropods grew to be. That would be 150 feet long.
The latest technology is used to explain almost everything imaginable about the extinct creature — like how long it lived, how long it took to grow, how much food it ate, and how big its eggs and babies were.
"And not just those facts, but how we were able to figure this stuff out, is really the force behind the exhibit," says Norell. "It goes through the process of discovery and why we think we can calculate these numbers like the heart beating only a few times per minute."
A re-creation of another sauropod, the Argentinosaurus, will greet guests as they enter the exhibit. Or its neck and head — the size of a large garbage can — will, anyway.
"It will be peering at you through the forest," Norell reveals. "It's the largest [land] animal that we know of right now."
Not much is known about the Argen Museum exhibits, shows and walking tours are sprouting up around the boroughs this spring, and some are definitely more thrilling than others. From a BubbleMania show in Queens, to a display of daring designs by the late
Alexander McQueen, here are the most exciting of the bunch:
It's open this weekend through April 29 at the Coney Island Museum, 1208 Surf Ave., Brooklyn. Museum entrance costs just 99 cents, but the live acts will cost extra. For more info, visit spectacularium.org.tinosaurus. "The animal is so big that it's rather incompletely excavated," he adds. "It's about 150 feet long," the length of several school buses.
There are lots of interactive, hands-on aspects to the exhibit that let visitors do math experiments to figure things out about how these dinosaurs lived and even what color they might have been.
But there will also be actual sauropod fossils on display.
"We use them to illustrate certain points, like how their bones evolved to compensate for this great size," Norell explains. "We have quite a few real bones of things like a Barosaurus. We have a Diplodocus skull on display. They're not just for, 'Wow, this is a real fossil.' We use those to point to particular aspects of their anatomy and talk about some of the evolutionary and ecological attributes that these animals had."
While most exhibits have a hands-off policy, there will be some touch-me specimens. "Among those, we have the teeth of the Diplodocus, the teeth of the Camarasaurus and dinosaur egg shells which you can touch," says Norell.
The museum's permanent dinosaur exhibit, completed in 1996 and upgraded last year, is still its most-visited gallery. While the longstanding exhibit highlights the relationships among different dinosaurs, the new one focuses on the biology of a particular type.
"This is a very different kind of dinosaur show and one that allows you to really visualize these animals as living, breathing creatures," says Norell, "and not just as bones."
Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty
The Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art has organized about 100 examples of Alexander McQueen's work (l). They cover everything from the British designer's postgraduate collection of 1992 to his final runway presentation, which took place after his death last year. Some of his signature designs on display will be his bumster trouser, kimono jacket and origami frock coat. Also on view are his pieces that reflect the exaggerated silhouettes of the 1860s, 1880s, 1890s and 1950s.
The exhibit runs May 4-July 31, and the cost is included with admission
to the Met (1000 Fifth Ave., at 82nd St.). Adults $20, seniors (65 and over) $15, students $10, kids under 12 accompanied by an adult are free.
BubbleMania: Science, Art & Comedy! with Casey Carle
Every kid likes bubbles. But even adults enjoy the sudsy fun of the BubbleMania show. It's led by Casey Carle (l.), who went to Ringling Bros. Clown College and has worked as a bubble consultant for companies like Cirque du Soleil and Discovery Channel. During the 30-minute show, he'll form fog bubbles, funky foam, helium bubbles, vortex bubbles and bubbles that burst into flames. Carle even uses a huge Hoberman sphere to create bubbles. After the show, kids and their families can head to the permanent Bubble Table at the New York Hall of Science to make their own.
BubbleMania runs April 16-24 at the Hall of Science (47-01 111th St., Queens). Showtimes are at 1 & 2 p.m.; additional performances April 22 at 3 p.m. and April 24 at noon. BubbleMania is $4, plus admission dinomight!
An awe-inspiring new exhibit sizes up the life of the gigantic creatures to the Hall (nysci.org), which is $11 for adults and $8 for kids.
The newest — and probably largest — New Yorker goes by the name of Mamenchisaurus,
and just as for many New Yorkers, moving to her new digs has been a battle.
Mamenchisaurus is the tractor-trailer-size star of "The World's Largest Dinosaurs," an exhibit opening at the American Museum of Natural History on Saturday.
The colossal creature, a female, took 100 people two years to create. She's an awesome example of long-necked, long-tailed sauropods.
But there's a reason for the show-stopping size.
"It's made in the way that those old invisible human models used to be," explains the exhibit's curator, Mark Norell. "One side of it appears as the way the animal would have looked in life. But on the other side, the skin is pulled back to reveal muscles, bones, organs and the mechanics of the inside of the animal and how it worked.
"We actually animate a lot of the internal organs by projecting on the outside of it, so that we can talk about the different layers of the anatomy and see things like the lungs work and heart beat and food passing through the animal," he adds. "So it's a very dynamic, lively sort of thing."
The hulking herbivore — that's right, sauropods got that big eating plants alone — is made out of polyurethane, synthetic material commonly used as a packing foam.
"We constructed it by sculpting a small version of it about 6 feet long," Norell says. "Then that was laser-scanned, and molds for the full-size model were then prototyped off of that."
The Mamenchisaurus stands 11 feet tall and stretches 60 feet long, but she isn't even half as big as some sauropods grew to be. That would be 150 feet long.
The latest technology is used to explain almost everything imaginable about the extinct creature — like how long it lived, how long it took to grow, how much food it ate, and how big its eggs and babies were.
"And not just those facts, but how we were able to figure this stuff out, is really the force behind the exhibit," says Norell. "It goes through the process of discovery and why we think we can calculate these numbers like the heart beating only a few times per minute."
A re-creation of another sauropod, the Argentinosaurus, will greet guests as they enter the exhibit. Or its neck and head — the size of a large garbage can — will, anyway.
"It will be peering at you through the forest," Norell reveals. "It's the largest [land] animal that we know of right now."
Not much is known about the Argen Museum exhibits, shows and walking tours are sprouting up around the boroughs this spring, and some are definitely more thrilling than others. From a BubbleMania show in Queens, to a display of daring designs by the late
Alexander McQueen, here are the most exciting of the bunch:
It's open this weekend through April 29 at the Coney Island Museum, 1208 Surf Ave., Brooklyn. Museum entrance costs just 99 cents, but the live acts will cost extra. For more info, visit spectacularium.org.tinosaurus. "The animal is so big that it's rather incompletely excavated," he adds. "It's about 150 feet long," the length of several school buses.
There are lots of interactive, hands-on aspects to the exhibit that let visitors do math experiments to figure things out about how these dinosaurs lived and even what color they might have been.
But there will also be actual sauropod fossils on display.
"We use them to illustrate certain points, like how their bones evolved to compensate for this great size," Norell explains. "We have quite a few real bones of things like a Barosaurus. We have a Diplodocus skull on display. They're not just for, 'Wow, this is a real fossil.' We use those to point to particular aspects of their anatomy and talk about some of the evolutionary and ecological attributes that these animals had."
While most exhibits have a hands-off policy, there will be some touch-me specimens. "Among those, we have the teeth of the Diplodocus, the teeth of the Camarasaurus and dinosaur egg shells which you can touch," says Norell.
The museum's permanent dinosaur exhibit, completed in 1996 and upgraded last year, is still its most-visited gallery. While the longstanding exhibit highlights the relationships among different dinosaurs, the new one focuses on the biology of a particular type.
"This is a very different kind of dinosaur show and one that allows you to really visualize these animals as living, breathing creatures," says Norell, "and not just as bones."
Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty
The Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art has organized about 100 examples of Alexander McQueen's work (l). They cover everything from the British designer's postgraduate collection of 1992 to his final runway presentation, which took place after his death last year. Some of his signature designs on display will be his bumster trouser, kimono jacket and origami frock coat. Also on view are his pieces that reflect the exaggerated silhouettes of the 1860s, 1880s, 1890s and 1950s.
The exhibit runs May 4-July 31, and the cost is included with admission
to the Met (1000 Fifth Ave., at 82nd St.). Adults $20, seniors (65 and over) $15, students $10, kids under 12 accompanied by an adult are free.
BubbleMania: Science, Art & Comedy! with Casey Carle
Every kid likes bubbles. But even adults enjoy the sudsy fun of the BubbleMania show. It's led by Casey Carle (l.), who went to Ringling Bros. Clown College and has worked as a bubble consultant for companies like Cirque du Soleil and Discovery Channel. During the 30-minute show, he'll form fog bubbles, funky foam, helium bubbles, vortex bubbles and bubbles that burst into flames. Carle even uses a huge Hoberman sphere to create bubbles. After the show, kids and their families can head to the permanent Bubble Table at the New York Hall of Science to make their own.
BubbleMania runs April 16-24 at the Hall of Science (47-01 111th St., Queens). Showtimes are at 1 & 2 p.m.; additional performances April 22 at 3 p.m. and April 24 at noon. BubbleMania is $4, plus admission dinomight!
An awe-inspiring new exhibit sizes up the life of the gigantic creatures to the Hall (nysci.org), which is $11 for adults and $8 for kids.
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