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         Dinosaurs:     more books (100)
  1. Encyclopedia Prehistorica Dinosaurs: The Definitive Pop-Up by Robert Sabuda, Matthew Reinhart, 2005-07-12
  2. Danny and the Dinosaur (An I Can Read Book, Level 1) by Syd Hoff, 1993-01-01
  3. How Do Dinosaurs Laugh Out Loud? by Jane Yolen, 2010-09-01
  4. National Geographic Dinosaurs by Paul Barrett, 2001-10-01
  5. Swimming With The Plesiosaur (Dinosaur Cove) by Rex Stone, 2009-11-01
  6. Oh My Oh My Oh Dinosaurs! (Boynton on Board) by Sandra Boynton, 1993-10-01
  7. The Dinosaur Museum: An Unforgettable, Interactive Virtual Tour Through Dinosaur History by National Geographic Society, 2008-10-28
  8. Dinosaurs Before Dark (Magic Tree House, No. 1) (Book & CD) by Mary Pope Osborne, 2008-05-27
  9. How Do Dinosaurs Learn Their Colors? -- 2006 publication by Yolen, 2006
  10. When Dinosaurs Die: A Guide to Understanding Death (Dino Life Guides for Families) by Laurie Krasny Brown, 1998-04-01
  11. How Do Dinosaurs Get Well Soon? by Jane Yolen, 2003-02-01
  12. National Geographic Kids Ultimate Dinopedia: The Most Complete Dinosaur Reference Ever by Don Lessem, 2010-10-12
  13. When Dinosaurs Came with Everything (Junior Library Guild Selection) by Elise Broach, 2007-09-25
  14. Tracking The Diplodocus (Dinosaur Cove) by Rex Stone, 2010-02-01

21. Find Dinosaur Pictures
Send a Prehistoric Postcard! Search this Website! Click here for pictures of ExtinctAnimals that lived After the dinosaurs, About This Site. A D Image Icons.
http://www.search4dinosaurs.com/
Send a
Prehistoric

Postcard!

Search this
... Panoramas One at a time A to Z list
An Index of Links to Great Dinosaur and other Prehistoric Art
Advertisement
Here's a music CD that young school kids and pre-schoolers love. And grownups appreciate the clever lyrics and stylish music too. Click on the CD picture to learn more.
Click on the Dinosaur name to see a small image preview. From there click the image to get to its internet home. Afrovenator
Albertosaurus

Albertosaurus

Allosaurus
... Zallinger Mural About this site This site's purpose is to help you locate great illustrations of dinosaurs thathave been posted on the Internet. It is intended as a shortcut from goingsite to site hoping to find the specific dinosaur your looking for. Thereare two ways of viewing the illustration links. This main page has an a to z list of all the art work and will show you one small GIF at a time. The icon pages will show you about 35 small GIFs and may take a little while to load.

22. How Jell-O(R) Killed The Dinosaurs
Explains what *really* happened to the dinosaurs. Includes pictures.
http://www.frankwu.com/Jell-O.html
by Frank Wu and Ben Lethbridge Background: The Collision In 1979, geologist Walter Alvarez discovered unexpectedly large amounts of the metal iridium in sediments that date from the time of the dinosaur extinction. Alvarez and others have taken this to be evidence that a large object struck the earth and, directly indirectly, killed off the dinosaurs. The Presence of Jell-O Jell-O 's Role Several possible mechanisms could account, singly or in combination, for the mass extinction of the dinosaurs. Those related to climate change have been discussed extensively in the popular press. The impact itself would have had an effect, as would the environmental changes brought about by widespread surface distribution How Much Jell-O Would an Apatosaurus Eat if an Apatosaurus Could Eat Jell-O? An apatosaurus, drawn by the natural and artificial flavorings (especially chocolate), would daily consume 20 apatosaurus-size servings for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and between-meals snacks. Originally published in The Journal of Irreproducible Results, 1992, vol. 36, no. 5 (July/August), pp. 7-8. 9/29/98: I just found out today that Jell-O is owned by Philip Morris, the tobacco conglomerate, thus indirectly substantiating Gary Larson's theory that it was SMOKING that killed the dinosaurs.

23. Discovery Channel: Walking With Dinosaurs
Tied to the BBC/Discovery series, Walking With dinosaurs, this offers a comprehensivelook at the times of the dinosaurs, with special features on what
http://dsc.discovery.com/stories/dinos/dinos.html
Browse dinosaur videos and DVDs, including Walking With Dinosaurs
Explore our Dinosaur Guide

Meet Big Al, the Allosaur.

Locate dinosaurs near you!
...
Dino A-Z glossary

2000 Discovery Communications Inc.

24. When Dinos Roamed America -- Discovery Channel -- Dinosaurs
When dinosaurs Roamed America is a breakthrough look at newly discovery dinosaurspecies and how they dominated the land in what is now North America.
http://dsc.discovery.com/convergence/dinos/dinos.html

Meet the OLD Neighbors

Type in your ZIP code and we'll instantly show you dinosaurs that once lived (quite literally) in your own back yard. Latest Discoveries
Paleontologists have uncovered two new North American dinosaurs: a raptor-like carnivore with feathers and a bizarre, beaked plant-eater. Dinosaur Videos
Watch feathery new species and fang-filled favorites in animated action.
By visiting this site, you agree to the terms and conditions
of our Visitor Agreement . Please read.
2002 Discovery Communications Inc.

25. Dinosaurs
dinosaurs. Before the dinosaurs. The appeared. * 225 million years ago dinosaursappeared ..and 65 million years ago All the dinosaurs died.
http://www.oink.demon.co.uk/topics/dinosaur.htm
Dinosaurs
Before the Dinosaurs
The planet earth is VERY old, about 4,600 million years. (thats a lot of birthday candles!!!). There was no life at all on earth for millions of years.
The first living things lived in the sea, they were so tiny that we would not be able to see them.
About 500 million years ago the first fish swam in the sea. There was nothing alive on the land at all.
435 million years ago the first plants started growing on the land.
395 million years ago the first land animals appeared.
225 million years ago dinosaurs appeared.....and 65 million years ago All the dinosaurs died.
Only 2 million years ago the first human appeared. Dinosaurs lived on the earth for 165 million years (we have only been here for 2 million!!!). But no one really knows why the dinosaurs died. Some people think that the dinosaurs died when a giant rock fell to earth from space (a meteorite). They believe that when it hit the earth it made a huge cloud of dust which blocked out the sun. The dinosaurs relied on the sun for warmth and may have died because it was too cold for them. The word 'dinosaur' means 'Terrible Lizard.'

26. Dinosaurs At The Smithsonian
. A diorama of Jurassaic dinosaurs from 135 million yearsago, in the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History.
http://photo2.si.edu/dino/dino.html
Photographs From Smithsonian Exhibits
The Dinosaur Hall
National Museum of Natural History
The Dinosaur Hall at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC ==Smithsonian photo by Chip Clark. The bones of a fierce looking Allosaurus dinosaur. Photographed on display at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History ==Smithsonian Photo by Dane A. Penland Diplodocus, the tall, long-neck skeleton from a sauropod dinosaur (plant-eater), which lived about 135 million years ago. From the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History. Smithsonian Photo by Dane A. Penland. Armored dinosaur Stegosaurus, a plant-eater of the late Jurassic Period, about 135 million years ago. As displayed in the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History. Smithsonian Photo #77-8094 by Dane A. Penland. A diorama of Jurassaic dinosaurs from 135 million years ago, in the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History. From left are shown: Allosaurus, Camptosaurus, and Diplodocus ==Smithsonian Photo by Dane A. Penland.

27. NIFs Hjemmeside
Ultimate i N¸rresundby Idr¦tsforening.
http://home8.inet.tele.dk/rct/nif/nif.htm
'NIFFEN' Dinosaurs' Disc Club
Ultimate-Frisbee Ultimate-Frisbee Dansk Frisbee Sport Union , eller… …for jer i
Her er nogle af os....
... og her er vores Studievej: Mandag 20.30-22.30, Torsdag 20.15 - 22.15
Danmarks Basketball-Forbund, DBBF

Dansk Frisbee Sport Union, DFSU
Robert Chr. Thomsen

28. Copyright Protection Is For Dinosaurs
fortune.com columnist Stewart Alsop explains why patents, copyrights, and trademarks are outdated and worse than useless.
http://www.fortune.com/indexw.jhtml?channel=artcol.jhtml&doc_id=43916

29. ABC Online - Walking With Dinosaurs
Accompanying website for BBC TV series, Walking with dinosaurs,screening in October/November 1999 on ABC TV.
http://www.abc.net.au/dinosaurs/default.htm

Walking with Dinosaurs - TV Series

Take a trip through the times of the dinosaurs. Information about each of the six episodes of the Walking With Dinosaurs series, the way the world was and how it changed. Big Al - the life of an Allosaurus
Big Al is a scientific detective story. Sscientists have tried to piece together every aspect of Big Al's life - his natural surroundings, his life as a hatchling, and the way he thought, fought, ate and moved.
Farewell T-Rex

Tyrannasaurus Rex is no longer the undisputed king, the biggest and baddest of them all - he's been de-throned as new fossil finds reveal several more terrifying challengers fighting for the crown. And to add insult to injury there's now a question over whether the king was ever a fearsome hunter at all
Meet the Dinosaurs

Lots of information about the dinosaurs that appear in the series and more. Go here for information about

30. Dinosaurs And Birds
Chances are, unless you're a vegetarian, dinosaurs are part of your regular dietbecause, if birds evolved from dinosaurs, every time you chow down on a chook
http://www.abc.net.au/science/slab/dinobird/story.htm
by Dr Paul Willis (Click here for an overview of this article) Have you eaten a dinosaur lately? Chances are, unless you're a vegetarian, dinosaurs are part of your regular diet because, if birds evolved from dinosaurs, every time you chow down on a chook, you're dining on dinosaur. But how do we know birds evolve from dinosaurs? And aren't there some authorities who say that they didn't? It all depends on how you work out relationships. Working out relationships Systematics (the science of evolutionary relationships) has undergone a major change over the last couple of decades. It used to be the case that all the features of organisms were important in working out the family tree. But in the mid 1960's the German entomologist Willy Hennig changed all that. Hennig claimed that the only features that carry any useful information about pedigree are the evolutionary novelties shared between organisms. Suppose we're trying to work out the relationships between a mouse, a lizard and a fish. They've all got backbones so the feature "backbone" is useless; it's a "primitive" character that tells you nothing. But the feature "four legs" is useful because it's an evolutionary novelty shared only between the lizard and the mouse. This implies that the lizard and mouse are more closely related to each other than either is to the fish. Put another way, the lizard and the mouse share a common ancestor that had four legs . The more evolutionary novelties we can find that support a particular relationship, the greater our confidence that the relationship is correct. "Air breathing", "neck" and "amniotic egg" are another three evolutionary novelties that tie the lizard and the mouse together and leave the fish as a more distant relative.

31. National Museum Of Natural History - Dinosaur Exhibits
This virtual tour of the National Museum of Natural History's dinosaurs is just thefirst step in informing you about our work with dinosaurs at the Smithsonian
http://www.nmnh.si.edu/paleo/dino/

Exhibits A-Z

Dinosaur Groups

Dinosaur Types

Jurassic Dinosaurs
...
Building a Dinosaur

NMNH scientists are replicating dinosaur bones and modeling dinosaur movement.
Welcome to our Dinosaur exhibits!
Photo by Chip Clark, NMNH
Click image "hotspots" for full-size views and
text explanations.
"Reptiles - Masters of Land" Hall
This virtual tour of the National Museum of Natural History's dinosaurs is just the first step in informing you about our work with dinosaurs at the Smithsonian. This site was created to provide a glimpse of some of the dinosaur specimens we have on view at the National Museum of Natural History. It is unique because it is the only site that showcases some of our most valuable and rare dinosaur specimens on exhibit. These specimens represent only a small fraction of our total dinosaur collection (less than 40 out of 1500 specimens!). You have several choices in the way you tour the site: If you're searching for a particular specimen or dinosaur by name, the alphabetical list in

32. Austin Wanderers OB Soccer Team
Men's over 50 division soccer. Includes photos and team news. Texas.
http://www.paisano.com/home/home003a.htm
Austin Wanderers OBFC
Senior Men's Soccer Team
Men's Over 50 Division Soccer
Austin, Texas
VETCUP
2001 Info
Austin Wanderers 2000
The Austin Wanderers repeated their 1999 Over-50 Mens National Championship at the US Amateur Soccer Association's Veterans Cup 2000 Tournament. This years event took place in Nashua, New Hampshire, June 30th to July 2nd and many thanks to the Veterans Cup Tournament Committee for their hard work in putting on this annual event. We started off winning the first two games easily by scores of 13-0 over Pennsylvania West and 7-0 over the Denver Kickers. The third game was a real slug fest against New England where we scored three goals and won 2-1. A local team, the Nashua GSIA, gave us a real run for the money in the fourth game and tied us 1-1. We moved into the final game against New England and ended regular time at a 3-3 standstill. We got the "Golden Goal" on Sequinya's free kick to pull it out in over-time. Wonderful day guys and enjoyed it all tremendously. Our Team Photo - The Austin Wanderers 2000.

33. National Museum Of Natural History - Dinosaur Exhibits
Top 10 Misconceptions about dinosaurs. dinosaurs represent failure and extinction.Rather, dinosaurs are the best examples of success and adaptation.
http://www.nmnh.si.edu/paleo/faq.html

Exhibits A-Z

Dinosaur Groups

Jurassic Dinosaurs

Cretaceous Dinosaurs
...
Building a Dinosaur

NMNH scientists are replicating dinosaur bones and modeling dinosaur movement.
Top 10 Misconceptions about
DINOSAURS
Dinosaurs represent failure and extinction.
Dinosaurs and "humans" coexisted

Dinosaurs were either all hot-blooded or all cold-blooded.
The word dinosaur means "terrible-lizard." ... Archaeologists dig up dinosaurs. Dinosaurs represent failure and extinction.
Rather, dinosaurs are the best examples of success and adaptation. They ruled the Earth longer than any other land animals (over 150 million years), and gave rise to BIRDS. Dinosaurs and "humans" coexisted The death of the last dinosaur and the appearance of the first "human" (genus HOMO ) was separated by about 62 million years. Dinosaurs were either all hot-blooded or all cold-blooded. Mesozoic dinosaurs were not "warm-blooded" like modern mammals, nor were they "cold-blooded" like modern lizards. Most specialists believe that dinosaurs were "dinosaur-blooded", a condition that combines certain aspects of "warm-bloodedness" with a changing metabolism over the animal's lifetime. The word dinosaur means "terrible-lizard."

34. THE UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY DINOSAURS FOOTBALL PAGE
Fan site. News, photos, links.
http://www.cuug.ab.ca/~leblancj/dinos/
The University of Calgary Dinosaurs
Football Page
A Jon LeBlanc Web Site * Fourth Year On The World Wide Web! * U of C Sports Telephone Information: 220-DINO Canadian Western
Universities Athletic
Association
Football Teams: Calgary
Dinosaurs Saskatchewan
Huskies British Columbia
Thunderbirds Manitoba
Bisons Alberta
Golden Bears Regina
Rams Canada's Most Dominant University Football Conference!
Canada West Conference Expanded
Canada's most powerful university football conference is set to expand by one team in 1999. The Regina Rams junior football team, which has perennially dominated the Prairie Junior Football Conference of the Canadian Junior Football League, has amalgamated with the sports programme of the University of Regina. The team will retain the name "Rams" for historical reasons rather than adopt the U of R Cougars name.
    U of C Athletics Dept. Football Page Dinos Alumni in the Canadian Football League University of Calgary Main Web Page Mega-List of Canadian amateur and pro football web sites CIAU National 1998 Football Schedule
Visit My Calgary Stampeders Fan Page Visit Jon LeBlanc, the owner of this page

35. Dinosaurs In New Mexico
dinosaurs in New Mexico.Category Regional North America Arts and Entertainment Museums......dinosaurs in New Mexico. Above A Pentaceratops. dinosaurs lived inNew Mexico between 220 and 66 million years ago.
http://museums.state.nm.us/nmmnh/dinosinnm.html
Dinosaurs in New Mexico Above: A Pentaceratops Dinosaurs lived in New Mexico between 220 and 66 million years ago. These 154 million years encompass the Late Triassic Period and the entire Jurassic and Cretaceous periods of geologic history. They also represent nearly the entire timespan of the dinosaurs, from their first appearance during the Late Triassic until their extinction at the end of the Cretaceous. Dinosaur fossils have been found across New Mexico, except for the southeastern portion of the state. Dinosaur fossils were first collected in New Mexico during the 1880s, and the state's dinosaurs now are displayed in many museums throughout the world. In New Mexico, dinosaur fossils are displayed at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science, the Geology Museum of the University of New Mexico, the Ruth Hall Museum of Paleontology at Ghost Ranch near Abiquiu, Clayton Lake State Park near Clayton, and the Museum of the New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources in Socorro. Dinosaurs became extinct 66 million years ago at the end of the Cretaceous Period. The Late Cretaceous dinosaurs from the San Juan Basin were some of the last to have lived on Earth. They are world famous because of the information they provide scientists about the cause of dinosaur extinction.

36. Guardian Unlimited | Archive Search
In the rocks of Zimbabwe, Theagarten LinghamSoliar discovered the 140 million year old tracks of infant predators.
http://www.guardianunlimited.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4069143,00.html
Go to: Guardian Unlimited home UK news World news Archive search Arts Books Business EducationGuardian.co.uk Film Football Jobs Life MediaGuardian.co.uk Money The Observer Online Politics Shopping SocietyGuardian.co.uk Sport Talk Travel Audio Email services Special reports The Guardian The weblog The informer The northerner The wrap Advertising guide Crossword Dating Headline service Syndication services Events / offers Help / contacts Information Newsroom Style guide Travel offers TV listings Weather Web guides Guardian Weekly Money Observer Network home UK news World latest Books ... Search Walking with baby dinosaurs In the rocks of Zimbabwe, Theagarten Lingham-Soliar discovered the 140 million year old tracks of infant predators Theagarten Lingham-Soliar
Guardian Thursday September 28, 2000
The Chewore Area in the Lower Zambesi Rift Valley of Northern Zimbabwe is dissected by meandering river valleys and escarpments. It is one of nature's great unspoilt regions with a variety of wildlife that includes elephants, lions and crocodiles. Raiders armed with Kalashnikovs regularly cross the nearby Mozambican and Zambian borders to hunt one of the world's most endangered animals. For this is the home of the largest population of black rhino in the world, and the rewards for rhino horn are tragically high. In the mid-1980s the area became famous for another reason. A hunter stumbled upon a trackway in the rock of 14 footprints belonging to a large, carnivorous dinosaur which roamed the region 140 million years ago and left its tracks deep in muddy terrain. The footprints dried rapidly in the hot Jurassic sun and with a-million-to-one odds became sandstone rock with the passing of geological time.

37. BillyBear4Kids.com Land O' Dinosaurs
Play games, download puzzles and decorate your computer's desktop with dinosaurs. LandO' dinosaurs Screen Saver for your personal computer.
http://www.billybear4kids.com/dinosaurs/long-long-ago.html
document.write("") BillyBear4Kids.Com Welcomes YOU!
Dinosaurs - Games, Print Projects, Jigsaw Puzzles, Wallpaper, Screen Saver
advertisement banner
HOME
Clipart Animal Scoop Holidays ... Screen Savers
A long long time ago... back before you were born, there lived the dinosaurs.
How do we know they were here?
Man found the bones in the earth.
How do we know what they looked like?
When the bones were put together (something like when you put a puzzle together), they were able to tell what the dinosaurs looked like.
How do we know how old they are?
Scientist have tests they can do to see how old the bones of a dinosaur are. They lived millions of years ago. What happened to the dinosaurs, and why aren't they living today? No one really knows the answers to these questions. Some say that their habitats changed making it hard for them to find food. In today's world, that is going on right now with our animal kingdom... there used to be 8 subspecies of Tigers... now there are only 5. It is important to help our animals live so they do not become extinct like the dinosaurs did. They are extinct... aren't they?

38. Dinosaurs And The Bible For Kids
Tells what the earth was like before the Flood. Offers the idea that people and dinosaurs were created at the same time, but that most of the dinosaurs drowned in the Flood.
http://www.geocities.com/dinospin/
Kids site showing Dinosaurs in the Bible, the pre-flood world, and how to meet God as their Savior. The Public Schools are brainwashing kids with evolution without having any real evidence and when creation makes a lot more sense. This site created by Emily from Calgary, Alberta. E-Mail  Me!   - click here Behold now Behemoth which I made with thee He eateth grass like an ox Lo now his strength is in his loins and his force in the navel of his belly he moveth his tail like a cedar tree The sinews of his thighs are knit together His bones are like string pieces of brass His bones are like bars of iron He is the Chief of the ways of God book of Job 40 v 15-19 Have you heard that dinosaurs lived millions of years ago and way before man? Or heard that they died out from a huge meteor that hit the earth? That is what they are teaching in the Public Schools. Have you heard that there is a God who created dinosaurs and they died out in Noah's Flood? Probably not! Dinosaurs did not live million of years ago or live way before man. God said to Job( Job lived after the time of Noah's flood), "Behold now Behemoth". Now I can hear you saying, "what in the world is Behemoth?". Well I think it is an Apatosaurus (see photo and verses above). Some people think Behemoth is a hippo or an elephant. But read on! "He eateth grass like an ox."  Hippo's eat grass, elephants eat grass, and an apatosaurus eats grass.

39. GRID
Our view of dinosaurs is forever changing. Discovering dinosaurs exploresour evolving conceptions of these extraordinary creatures.
http://search.eb.com/dinosaurs/dinosaurs/grid.html
Our view of dinosaurs is forever changing. Discovering Dinosaurs explores our evolving conceptions of these extraordinary creatures. Trace the great dinosaur debate through time by traveling down through each color-coded theme.

40. Dinosaur Floor: Meet The Dinosaurs
The Age of the dinosaurs. Here is a part of the Staircase of Time showing when the dinosaurs lived. dinosaurs appeared on Earth
http://www.cotf.edu/ete/modules/msese/dinosaurflr/meet.html
The Age of the Dinosaurs Here is a part of the " Staircase of Time " showing when the dinosaurs lived. Dinosaurs appeared on Earth nearly 250 Million years ago, early in a period of time geologists called Triassic . They grew in numbers and types during the Jurassic time period, and dominated Earth during the Cretaceous time period. Their feet shook the ground for nearly 200 million years - 40,000 times as long as recorded human history! But then suddenly they all mysteriously disappeared at the end of the Cretaceous Period about 65 million years ago. Why? Look in some of the other rooms and see! Next
The Age of the Dinosaurs Diorama Room The Age of the Dinosaurs Diorama Room Giant Impact ... Into the Future Site maintained by the ETE Team
Last updated on February 24, 2003

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