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         Dinosaurs:     more books (100)
  1. How Do Dinosaurs Say Goodnight? by Jane Yolen, 2000-04-01
  2. The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs (Princeton Field Guides) by Gregory S. Paul, 2010-10-10
  3. Dinosaur Roar (Picture Puffins) by Paul Stickland, Henrietta Stickland, 2002-04-15
  4. Big Book of Dinosaurs by DK Publishing, 1994-09-01
  5. First Dinosaur Encyclopedia by DK Publishing, 2006-12-18
  6. Dinosaurs Divorce by Marc Brown, Laurie Krasny Brown, 1988-09-01
  7. How Do Dinosaurs Clean Their Rooms? by Jane Yolen, 2004-09-01
  8. Eating the Dinosaur by Chuck Klosterman, 2010-07-06
  9. How Do Dinosaurs Say I Love You? by Jane Yolen, 2009-10-01
  10. How Do Dinosaurs Eat Their Food? by Jane Yolen, 2005-09-01
  11. How Do Dinosaurs Go To School? by Jane Yolen, 2007-07-01
  12. Dinosaurs Before Dark (Magic Tree House, No. 1) (Book & CD) by Mary Pope Osborne, 2008-05-27
  13. Danny and the Dinosaur (An I Can Read Book, Level 1) by Syd Hoff, 1993-01-01
  14. I Love Dinosaurs Sticker Book (I Love Sticker Books) by Roger Priddy, 2009-06-09

1. BBC - Walking With Dinosaurs
Articles and activities from the BBC series.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dinosaurs/
@import url('/includes/tbenh.css') ; Home
TV

Radio

Talk
...
A-Z Index

THURSDAY
27th May 2004
Text only
Animals Prehistoric Life Genes ...
BBC Homepage

In Prehistoric Life Beasts Cavemen Dinosaurs ...
Help
Like this page? Send it to a friend! You are here: BBCi Prehistoric Life Dinosaurs Check out the Sea Monster fact files or play the adventure game Sea Monster Adventure Make your own journey through the 7 deadliest seas of all time. Fact Files Meet the gigantic cast from the TV programmes. Fight Club Build your beast and send it into combat. Big Al Game Dodge the predators and snap up the prey! Sharpen up your survival skills in the hostile environment of the Late Jurassic.

2. Dinosaurs -- A Thematic Unit
From the Royall Tyrell Museum of Paleontology, unit adapted from Legacies Using Children's Literature in the Classroom
http://www.libsci.sc.edu/miller/Dinosaurs.htm
This sample thematic unit has been adapted from Legacies: Using Children's Literature in the Classroom written by Liz Rothlein and Anita Meyer Meinbach. HarperCollins College Publishers, 1996, pp. 432-438.
    Model Thematic Unit: Dinosaurs Theme: Dinosaurs Focus: Students will explore prehistoric times to expand their knowledge of dinosaurs. Grade Level: Primary Objectives: On completion of this thematic unit, students will be able to: 1. Identify at least ten different dinosaurs and name them. 2. Explain the difference between plant-eating dinosaurs and meat-eating dinosaurs. 3. Explain how scientists know as much as they do about dinosaurs 4. Describe the period of time when dinosaurs lived on earth. 5. Identify dinosaurs that lived on land versus prehistoric creatures that lived in the sea or flew in the air. 6. Compare various sizes, weights, and body shapes of dinosaurs. Materials and Resources:
    1. Science Adventures:

3. Zoom Dinosaurs - EnchantedLearning.com
dinosaurs, dinosaur anatomy and dinosaur extinction at Zoom dinosaurs. Learn about and more. Zoom dinosaurs Dinosaur Information.
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/dinosaurs/
Zoom Dinosaurs - Dinosaur Information
Zoom Dinosaurs is a comprehensive on-line hypertext book about dinosaurs. It is designed for students of all ages and levels of comprehension. It has an easy-to-use structure that allows readers to start at a basic level on each topic, and then to progress to much more advanced information as desired, simply by clicking on links.
Dinosaur Site Index
LITTLE EXPLORERS
ENCHANTED LEARNING SOFTWARE
BUSY LITTLE BRAINS CD-ROM for children ...
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4. Beri's Dinosaur World Magazine
Illustrated site devoted to vertebrate paleontology and dinosaurs.
http://www.geocities.com/dinosaurbero/
OO Original dinosaur images! Bookmark! Next time it will load up faster ! Dinosaur pictures! Dinosauria, Dinosaurs, Dinosauri, Dinozavri, Dinosaurios, Dinosaurier... Dinosaur, Dinozaur, Dinozaver, Dinosaurio... Beri's Dinosaur World e-mail
BDW
DINOSAURS! GO TO CONTENTS CONTACT Quod bonum, faustum, felix, fortunatumque sit.
Find books:
Welcome to the vertebrate paleontology site, designed, written, painted, animated and edited by the paleolife illustrator Beri. This Web site is designed for dinosaur fans, paleontology enthusiasts and professionals. Some other cool extinct animals like saber-toothed tigers and pterosaurs are also featured. Welcome DINOSAUR IMAGES
"MUST HAVE" DINOSAUR BOOKS! The master dinosaur book-list
dinosaurs dinosaur images extinct animals dinosaur articles facts and speculation news and information
SIC TRANSIT GLORIA MUNDI
BERI'S DINOSAUR WORLD
A VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY SITE This site is convenient for surfers of all ages.

5. Dinosaurs!
dinosaurs! This World Wide Web (WWW) site provides visitors with a look at the prehistoric natural history of the world through online displays of photographs and descriptions of fossils of some
http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://www.hcc.hawaii.edu/dinos/dinos.1.html&am

6. Zoom Dinosaurs
Zoom dinosaurs This World Wide Web (WWW) site, maintained by Enchanted Learning Software, offers an online hypertext book about dinosaurs. The site is designed to accommodate students of all ages
http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://www.zoomdinosaurs.com/&y=0259E48BD90

7. Giant Elephants In Nepal
Article about a group of animals that are either living dinosaurs or genetic freaks.
http://www.ncf.carleton.ca/~bz050/HomePage.gne.html
LIVING STEGODONT OR GENETIC FREAK?
In February and March of 1992, the intrepid British explorer Sir John Blashford-Snell was trekking through a remote valley in the Bardia region of western Nepal in search of "giant elephants" reported by the locals. Two representatives of these strange elephants, both bulls, were eventually observed - and photographed. The two beasts, living up to their reputation, were estimated to have footprints measuring 22.5 inches across and a height to the shoulders of 11 feet 3 inches, which makes them even larger than the largest-ever recorded specimen of the Asian elephant, Elephas maximus . Adding to the confusion was the presence of two very large domes on each elephant's forehead, and a distinctive nasal bridge. These two features are not present on normal Asian elephants, but are, however, distinct on an extinct species of primitive elephant, the Stegodont . Of course, the problem is that the Stegodont , the ancestor of both the African and Asian elephants we know today, as well as the extinct mammoth, apparently died out more than a million years ago. But this didn't stop Canadian paleontologist Dr. Clive Coy , as well as Snell himself, to speculate that the giant Nepalese elephants could very well be, in fact, representatives of the presumedly extinct Stegodont. However romantic and likable, not to mention being a great cryptozoological triumph, the Stegodont theory is now thought to be unlikely. The theory now favoured by cryptozoologists, is that these "giant elephants" are more likely to be mutant versions of the normal Asian elephant, rather than a Stegodont or even a separate, new species of elephant. One of the reasons behind this more orthodox solution is that a stegodont surviving to this day is perhaps a little far fetched (though nothing is truly far-fetched in cryptozoology!).

8. The Dinosauria
s, background information, and pictures are provided for different dinosaur......The Dinosauria This World Wide Web (WWW) site is a general resource for information concerning dinosaurs.
http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/diapsids/dinosaur.

9. Dinosaurs: Toy & Replicas
From Link and Pin Hobbies.
http://www.linkandpinhobbies.com/dinotoys.htm

Sea Critters

Wood Craft Kits

Wildlife Replicas
Please Note: Collectible electronic toys may contain batteries.
For out of production toys, we cannot guarantee that there is any battery power remaining.
You may have to replace the batteries. This is not considered a defect in the toy.
Click here for ordering instructions Quick! Bookmark this page "To view the photos: Click on the blue underlined item name" (All prices in U.S.A. Dollars) Kaiyodo Dinomania Chocolosaurs
(Supplies are limited)
Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS DEINONYCHUS Temp Sold Out Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS DEINONYCHUS SKELETON Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS PLESIOSAURUS Temp Sold Out Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS PLESIOSAURUS SKELETON Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS MAIASAURA Sale Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS SAICHANIA Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS STYRACOSAURUS Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS STYRACOSAURUS SKULL Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS ACROCANTHOSAURUS Temp Sold Out Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS ACROCANTHOSAURUS SKELETON Sale Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS HEMICYCLASPIS Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS PLEUROCYSTITES Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS ARCHELON TURTLE Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS RUTIODON Sale Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS LYSTROSAURUS Sale Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS TYLOSAURUS Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS GLYPTODON Sale Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS ANDREWSARCHUS Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS TRIARTHRUS Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS HALLUCIGENIA Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS TAPEJARA IMPERATOR Temp Sold Out Kaiyodo DINOMANIA CHOCOLOSAURS TROCHOSAURUS Kaiyodo

10. Binary Dinosaurs - Home Computing History
Online computer museum with photographs, articles and some humourous commentary.
http://www.binarydinosaurs.co.uk
Welcome to Binary Dinosaurs , the online display of a real collection of over computers that begins at the Magnavox Odyssey from 1972, travels through the 'pong wars' of the 1970s, visits the explosion of diversity and excellence that created the home computer market of the early 80's and ends when things started getting boring (for me) in about 1997 with the Apple Mac G3, a machine still in use today.
Head up to the Control Panel to find yer way round the site and enjoy your visit!
Visitor count since 7/6/2002
Latest Updates 21 May 2004 First update for a bit now that I'm gainfully employed again, and now I've got full out of hours workshop facilities for all that scope and meter based troubleshooting japes :)
Anyhoo, latest BinarySaurs arrival is a no-poly boxed TI99/4a, but the more uncommon beige version rather than the black/chrome machine everyone knows....more soon. 18 Apr 2004 For no other reason apart from 'I could' I decided to wash a CBM PET today. This will be an ongoing series since it's still drying :) 03 Apr 2004 Thanks to my job interview in Newmarket I managed to expand the trip to allow me to pick up a few outstanding donations as well as show my face at RetroBeep in Bletchley Park, so in no particular order I now have an excellent condition

11. Dictionary
1988. Digging dinosaurs. dinosaurs were wholly terrestrial, with no known aquatic species. Only one major clade of dinosaurs, Aves ( birds ), survives today.
http://www.dinosauria.com/dml/diction.htm
Dictionary
Jeff Poling
Jeff Poling , with thanks to the members of the Dinosaur Mailing List who provided some of the definitions below. Last updated February 8, 1999. Updated every Monday and Thursday, as necessary. A B C D ... Z acronomic adj. describes an animal that dwells in high places (treetops, cliffs, etc.) accretion n. an object grown by the process of externally layering material one layer on top of another. Caliche and pearls are examples of accretions accrete v. altricial adj. describes organisms that are born relatively undeveloped, requiring significant parental care for survival. Humans are an example of an altricial organism anchor taxa adj. describes the taxa used to define a phylogenetic taxon or clade apomorph n. evolutionarily advanced ('derived') character state. The long neck of the giraffe is apomorphic; the short neck of its ancestor is plesiomorphic in cladistics, a character state present throughout a clade but not present in any close outgroup of the clade apomorphy n. apomorphic adj.

12. Welcome To M. Richard Associates Inc.'s Dinosaur Project
Computer generated dinosaur animations and pictures. Streaming multimendia in Quicktime 4 format. Information on some of the more common dinosaurs.
http://m-richard-associates.com/dino/
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It appears that you may not be using a 'JavaScript - Enabled' browser.
To view these pages properly, your browser will need to support Javascript , as well as Java If you are sure that your current browser supports these, turn on JavaScript Otherwise, now might be a good time to upgrade your current browser by clicking on one of the images below. You will also need the Quicktime 4 Plugin to view the dinosaur animations. Click on the image at right to get it (free!) This DinoLand Webring site owned by M. Richard Associates Inc.
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13. The Dinosauria
Click on these buttons to learn more about dinosaurs Select Systematics to learn about specific dinosaur groups! Go to the dinosaurs in Cyberspace Dinolinks.
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/diapsids/dinosaur.html

Michael Skrepnick
The Dinosauria:
Truth is Stranger than Fiction
Dinosaurs occupy a vaunted niche in the public mind; the very word conjures up images of gargantuan, now-defunct beasts that ruled the Earth long ago, holding a reign of terror for some 160 million years, and then mysteriously vanishing with only their titanic bones as evidence of their existence. "Dinosaur" reaches deep into our psyche and drags out nightmares from culturally-embedded monster myths. What is the truth about dinosaurs that underlies the popular awe and mystique that shrouds them? What does modern science have to say about the dinosaurs? Are they truly obsolete, long-extinct relics of a more primitive and experimental stage in the history of life, or is there more to the Dinosauria than meets the eye? Dinosaurs are animals that evolved into many sizes and shapes. Dinosaurs were and are quite diverse, and often one person will think of an animal like a long-necked sauropod, while another person will think of a large, fierce meat-eater like Tyrannosaurus rex . It should be clear then that the term "dinosaurs", or the scientific version "Dinosauria", is describing a diverse group of animals with widely different modes of living. The term was invented by

14. Dinosaurs - What Is A Dinosaur?- Enchanted Learning Software
Learn about dinosaurs, dinosaur extremes, how dinosaurs are named, and dinosaur myths. Includes print out dinosaur information pages.
http://www.AllAboutDinosaurs.com/subjects/dinosaurs/allabout/
EnchantedLearning.com is a user-supported site.
As a bonus, site members have access to a banner-ad-free version of the site, with print-friendly pages.
Click here to learn more.
(Already a member? Click here.
ZoomDinosaurs.com

ALL ABOUT DINOSAURS! What is a Dinosaur? Dino Info Pages Dinosaur Coloring Print-outs Name That Dino ... Dino Myths
What is a Dinosaur?

Millions of years ago, long before there were any people, there were dinosaurs. Dinosaurs were one of several kinds of prehistoric reptiles that lived during the Mesozoic Era , the "Age of Reptiles."
Dinosaurs were reptiles and most hatched from eggs. No dinosaurs could fly and none lived in the water.
Plant-eating sauropods were the largest animals to ever walk on Earth - but blue whales are more massive than any of the dinosaurs were!
The largest dinosaurs were over 100 feet (30 m) long and up to 50 feet (15 m) tall (like Argentinosaurus , Seismosaurus, Ultrasauros Brachiosaurus , and Supersaurus ). The smallest dinosaurs, like Compsognathus , were about the size of a chicken. Most dinosaurs were in-between. It is very difficult to figure out how the dinosaurs sounded, how they behaved, how they mated, what color they were, or even how to tell whether a fossil was male or female.

15. Dinosaurs Fact And Fiction
dinosaurs Fact and Fiction Here is an extensive list of dinosaur questions and answers. Find out what dinosaurs ate, where they lived, which ones were the biggest, how many types there were, how
http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/dinosaurs&y=020C5E

16. Zoom Dinosaurs - EnchantedLearning.com
Includes information on evolution, extinction, and fossils, as well as dinosaur games and jokes.
http://www.EnchantedLearning.com/subjects/dinosaurs/index.html
Zoom Dinosaurs - Dinosaur Information
Zoom Dinosaurs is a comprehensive on-line hypertext book about dinosaurs. It is designed for students of all ages and levels of comprehension. It has an easy-to-use structure that allows readers to start at a basic level on each topic, and then to progress to much more advanced information as desired, simply by clicking on links.
Dinosaur Site Index
LITTLE EXPLORERS
ENCHANTED LEARNING SOFTWARE
BUSY LITTLE BRAINS CD-ROM for children ...
Send us E-mail

17. Dino Don Inc.'s Dinosaur Resource Portal > Home
JURASSIC PARK. dinosaurs. You can purchase fullsized, one-of-a-kind, Jurassic Park dinosaurs here. read more
http://www.dinodon.com/
Home Exhibits Products Dinos For Sale Contact Us Dino Don's World Login May 26, 2004 Announcements
JURASSIC PARK
DINOSAURS
You can purchase full-sized, one-of-a-kind, Jurassic Park dinosaurs here. read more...
"Now Playing" Dragon Bones exhibition
at Arizona Science Center in Phoenix. See our exhibit listings read more...
Related Links Chinasaurs exhibit Dino World exhibit Dragon Bones exhibit Dinosaur Books ... Dino Don's World Welcome, Dinosaur fans!
If you are looking for dinosaur videos , dinosaur books , dinosaur activities , dinosaur resources , even a dinosaur dictionary - you've come to the right place.
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18. Dinosaurs: Facts And Fiction
US Geological Survey GeneralInterest Publication dinosaurs Facts and Fiction. By Ronald J. Litwin, Robert E. Weems, and Thomas R. Holtz, Jr.
http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/dinosaurs/
By Ronald J. Litwin, Robert E. Weems, and Thomas R. Holtz, Jr.
Few subjects in the Earth sciences are as fascinating to the public as dinosaurs. The study of dinosaurs stretches our imaginations, gives us new perspectives on time and space, and invites us to discover worlds very different from our modern Earth. From a scientific viewpoint, however, the study of dinosaurs is important both for understanding the causes of past major extinctions of land animals and for understanding the changes in biological diversity caused by previous geological and climatic changes of the Earth. These changes are still occurring today. A wealth of new information about dinosaurs has been learned over the past 30 years, and science's old ideas of dinosaurs as slow, clumsy beasts have been totally turned around. This pamphlet contains answers to some frequently asked questions about dinosaurs, with current ideas and evidence to correct some long-lived popular misconceptions. Although much has been discovered recently about dinosaurs, there is still a great deal more to learn about our planet and its ancient inhabitants.

19. Mokele M'Bembe The Hunt For The Living Dinosaur
Information about living dinosaurs in Africa.
http://freespace.virgin.net/brian.goodwin/mbembe.htm

20. Dinosaur Links
Below are several categories of dinosaurrelated information on the Internet. These links will be updated periodically, so stop by again! The Carnegie Museum of Natural History. Russian dinosaurs. Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History. Paper dinosaurs Exhibit. Museo de la Plata, Argentina
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/diapsids/dinolinks.html
Below are several categories of dinosaur-related information on the Internet. These links will be updated periodically, so stop by again! Please contact us if you have any comments, link problems/updates, or especially additional links that we've missed. We're trying to keep these links both up-to-date and comprehensive, so any contributions will be appreciated! Sorry, this site does not contain links to commercial for-profit sites. Also, if you haven't already, be sure to check out the extensive dinosaur section at the University of California Museum of Paleontology , including the Dinobuzz , with discussions of hot topics in dinosaur science, and also take note of our other award-winning pages on phylogenetic systematics geology evolution museum collections database , the subway , and the Web Lift to Taxa . You may also find our list of Paleontological Resources useful. If you really, truly enjoy dinosaurs and would like to discuss them on-line in a scientific fashion, try joining the Dinosaur Mailing List. But beware: it's a high volume list, and often quite technical. Make sure you read the information sent to you when you join. Save the message so you know how to unsubscribe.

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