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         Dinosaurs:     more books (100)
  1. Dinosaurs, Dinosaurs by Byron Barton, 1993-03-01
  2. Saving The Stegosaurus (Dinosaur Cove) by Rex Stone, 2009-07-01
  3. Visual Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs by DK Publishing, 2005-04-04
  4. Flight Of The Quetzalcoatlus (Dinosaur Cove) by Rex Stone, 2008-11-01
  5. What Really Happened to the Dinosaurs? (DJ and Tracker John) by John D. Morris, Ken Ham, 1990-11
  6. Dinosaur's Binkit by Sandra Boynton, 1998-09-01
  7. Edwina, The Dinosaur Who Didn't Know She Was Extinct by Mo Willems, 2006-09-01
  8. Dinosaur Hunt (Max Spaniel) by David Catrow, 2009-08-01
  9. Ten Little Dinosaurs Picture Book (Wiggle Eyes) by Jim Harris, 1996-10-01
  10. Oh, Say Can You Say Di-no-saur? (Cat in the Hat's Learning Library) by Bonnie Worth, 1999-04-06
  11. Cam Jansen:The Mystery of the Dinosaur Bones (Cam Jansen) by David A. Adler, 2004-07-22
  12. Ten Terrible Dinosaurs (Picture Puffins) by Paul Stickland, 2000-10-01
  13. March Of The Ankylosaurus (Dinosaur Cove) by Rex Stone, 2008-08-01
  14. Detective Dinosaur (I Can Read Book 2) by James Skofield, 1998-02-28

61. New Scientist | Dinosaurs
Dinosaur science, including dinosaur DNA, Trex, why they died out, dinosaurs to birds, smuggling, and much more.
http://www.newscientist.com/hottopics/dinosaurs/
The Rex Files
LATEST NEWS:
Cannibal dinosaurs revealed by tooth marks

When the going got tough, some meat-eating dinosaurs turned on their own kind to satisfy their humger Full story

Cruel, massive, scaly lizards, as tall as the tallest tree, always ugly and very often natural-born killers...For the past century dinosaurs have dominated our imaginations - from the schlock-horror nightmares of the 1950s to the Jurassic Parks of the 1990s. But beyond all the fun and the hype, there's a lot of science out there. And the past decade has been especially good for dinoresearchers who've come up with no end of theories on everything from dino DNA to weird illnesses they suffered from to the chances of reconstructing a real one in your garden. Some of the science has definitely upset old ideas. There are now two distinct and very rival camps: one with a vision of a quick and nasty end (asteroid impact), the other seeing a slow and nasty end (deadly gases from outer space, huge volcanic explosions on Earth). While these big questions are still waiting to be solved, answers are emerging to lots of smaller, equally intriguing ones. What colour were dinos? (Smart money's on pink.) And how did they sound? (Like an upset tum on a bad day!) Perhaps, the most fascinating question of all - how did they live? Were they always the fierce loners of fiction?

62. 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/

63. 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

64. The Unofficial Dinosaurs Homepage
Jim Henson's animatronic puppet series about a very strange family of dinosaurs.
http://www.thalia.sci.kun.nl/funpage/television/dinosaurs/index.html
Als deze tekst wordt weergegeven, dan kan uw browser niet overweg met frames. Volg daarom deze verwijzing

65. Dinosaurs And Birds
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
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.

66. IF DINOSAURS COULD FLY HELICOPTERS
Offers about, cartoons, jokes and a gallery.
http://www.members.aol.com/flyingdinosaurs/
Some nonsense about Dinosaurs flying helicopters.
Recent investigations into the possibilities of dinosaurs being able to fly helicopters have led to startling facts like:
  • They may not have died out
  • Have opened fast food outlets (Kentucky Fried Dinosaurs)
  • Humans wouldn't be the only ones that could fly them
  • I would probably make a web site about them Please note that no alcohol was used in making these pages... if it were... could have been much better. I'm sure that AOL web space has been used much more constructively by others with imagination... but at the moment I can't think of a use... and as i'm paying for it.. it's going to have dinosaurs flying helicopters on it. If the BBC would like to contact me in the near future with a follow up to their successful dinosaur series 'Walking with Dinosaurs' and 'Walking with Animals' with a much more entertaining 'Flying with Dinosaurs (in helicopters)', please do. Home About Cartoons Jokes ... Stuff
  • 67. Nick Reiman's Dinosaurs
    Dinosaur databases on the predatory dinosaurs and on the herbivores.
    http://home.rmi.net/~shasta/

    68. BillyBear4Kids.com Land O' Dinosaurs
    Play games, download puzzles and decorate your computer s desktop with dinosaurs. Land O 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
    Banner Advertisements
    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?

    69. Dino Web
    Dinosaur activities, games, museum reviews, and theories. In English and German.
    http://www.dino-web.com/
    Dino Web
    Vote for your favourite dinosaur Tyrannosaurus Triceratops Deinonychus Apatosaurus Velociraptor Giganotosaurus Coelophysis Troodon Archaeopteryx Stegosaurus Ankylosaurus Iguanodon Heterodontosaurus None of these All Dinosaurs
    View results
    Welcome to Dino Web!
    My name is Alastair Reece and I am years old. I love everything to do with dinosaurs, so I have made this dinosaur site for you. I hope you enjoy it. If you want to write to me about dinosaurs, e-mail me - I would love to hear from you!
    Willkommen auf meiner Dinosauriersite!
    Mein Name ist Alastair Reece und ich bin schicke mir eine E-Mail
    New!
    Send your friends a digital dinosaur picture with my new free postcard service.
    Neu!
    Schicke deinen Freunden eine meiner neuen Dinokarten Home Info Games ... E-Mail You are visitor no.

    70. Elementary Theme Pages For Students And Teachers
    Elementary Theme Pages The dinosaurs.
    http://www.stemnet.nf.ca/CITE/dinosaur.htm
    Elementary Theme Pages The Dinosaurs
    General Resources

    Dinosaur Disappearance

    Dinosaur Factsheets

    Dinosaur Classification
    ...
    Dino Trace Fossils

    contact Jim Cornish,
    Grade Five Teacher,
    Gander, Newfoundland, Canada.
    This page was last updated on September 2001.
    You have made the visit to my Theme Pages!

    71. OBJECTIVE: Creation Education: Dinosaur Expedition 2002
    Account of an expedition to Africa to find living dinosaurs.
    http://objective.jesussave.us/dinoexpedition.html
    OBJECTIVE: Christian Ministries
    Turn to OBJECTIVE for an objective Christian perspective
    OBJECTIVE:
    Creation Education
    Author Bio:
    Dr. Richard Paley is a teacher of Divinity and Theobiology at Fellowship University
    more...
    Front Page
    OTHER OBJECTIVES:
    The Pastor's Corner Landover Baptist Shutdown Mall Mission Halloween Reclamation ... OBJECTIVE: Ministries Online
    Shop Quality Christian Gifts E-Mail OBJECTIVE Sign Our Prayerbook View Our Prayerbook
    Dinosaur Expedition 2002
    Article Index
    Dinosaur Expedition 2002
    Article by Dr. Richard Paley
    Propagandists of Evolutionism , in their attempts to discredit research into the true Biblical foundations of Origins, have often accused Creation Science of being a non-experimental endeavor. This couldn't be further from the truth (not even if it were Lucy's knee joint! ). Besides lab experiments involving such diverse fields as hydrology discontinuity systematics , and design inference (to name but a few,) Creation Scientists also do fieldwork to test hypotheses and gather evidence of God's handiwork. This Summer (2002), I was blessed to be able to take part in some very important fieldwork which I would like to share with my readers. In order to further support the

    72. Dinosaurs
    Age of Reptiles. All About dinosaurs. Billy Bear s Land o dinosaurs. BrainPop dinosaurs. Children s Stomping Ground. Dinosauricon. dinosaurs. dinosaurs / Extinction.
    http://www.kidskonnect.com/Dinosaurs/DinoHome.html
    Academy of Natural Sciences Age of Reptiles All About Dinosaurs Billy Bear's Land o' Dinosaurs ... Wyoming Dinosaur Center All rights reserved by

    73. Dinosaur Dinosaurs Dino Prehistoric Books Games Info Information Videos Stickers
    Offers paleontologythemed toys, books, and games. Also includes kid-oriented online activities, news, and information.
    http://members.optushome.com.au/dinosaurworld
    dinosaur information and books toys and games on all types of dinosaurs and pre-historic creatures. Whether it be tyrannosaurus rex, allosaurus, velociraptor, pterodactyl, brontosaurus, brachiosaurus, dilophosaurus or dimetrodon. dinosaur activities , projects, posters and videos and films of dinosaurs and their sounds dinosaur masks mobiles and colouring as well as dinosaur diorama
    Our ultimate dinosaur site is designed to cater to all types of dinosaurs fans from kids to interested grown-ups. We have a huge range of dinosaur books and information available and some links to other dinosaur related sites. Purchase a great dinosaur calendar or choose the latest dino games on cd-rom or dvd . When you're through there just checkout the latest dino news and join our ultimate dinosur club and get the low-down on how to receive free, yes free dinosaur animations sounds and more just by joining our free dinosaur club We have links to other scientific sites and fun dino sites all over the world from museums to archaeological digs. So if you're looking for the ultimate dinosaur website, you just found it. Come on in and find out all about the wonderful pre-historic world of the ultimate dinosaur and maybe pick-up some of the great novelties, gifts or merchandise we have on offer for you. Feel free to email us here at ultimate dinosaur anytime, or head off to the world's finest carburator site at

    74. Dinosaurs
    Welcome to the Wonderful World of dinosaurs. On this site you will find information on over 50 dinosaurs. Each presented in easy
    http://www4.tpgi.com.au/users/amcgann/dinosaurs/
    Welcome to the Wonderful World of Dinosaurs On this site you will find information on over 50 dinosaurs. Each presented in easy to read language and accompanied by clear illustrations. Sit back and enjoy the "World Before Time" Contact Us

    75. Kinetosaurs: Putting Some Teeth Into Art And Science
    Online exhibit about dinosaurs and kinetic sculptures called kinetosaurs.
    http://www.childrensmuseum.org/kinetosaur/index.html
    Have you ever seen a dinosaur dance, roll its head around or swish its tail? Artist John Payne uses science and art to create his dinosaur sculptures, and to make them move. Explore this Web site to learn about John Payne's kinetosaurs, discover the science behind his art, and find out how to make your own dinosaur art! Site Map
    Site designed and developed by Educational Web Adventures
    The Children's Museum of Indianapolis

    76. Untitled Document
    What were the dinosaurs? What did they look like? For 170 million years, dinosaurs ruled the earth. It was a time of massive evolutionary changes.
    http://www4.tpgi.com.au/users/amcgann/dinosaurs/page2.htm
    Search the Web. What were the dinosaurs?
    What did they look like? Why did they become extinct? How did they move? The answers to these questions are not easy to discover, nor are they 'set in stone'. But scientists have managed to piece together information on these remarkable animals from fossils discovered all around the world. This site attempts to present these findings in an easy to read format that hopefully will enable you to better understand and appreciate these fascinating animals. For 170 million years, Dinosaurs ruled the earth. It was a time of massive evolutionary changes. During this time there were three major time periods; the Triassic Period, the Jurassic Period, and the Cretaceous Period. Triassic Period (250 - 208 million years ago) Jurassic Period (208 - 144 million years ago) Cretaceous Period (144 - 65 million years ago) Allosaurus Homalocephale Psittacosaurus Amargasaurus ... Protoceratops sw="none";sd="none";ref=""+escape(document.referrer);

    77. Dismantle Notice
    Charles G. Messing's class at Nova Southeastern University.
    http://www.nova.edu/ocean/biol1090/
    Sorry, the web pages for
    BIOL 1090:The Age of Dinosaurs
    at

    have been temporarily dismantled for updating. Thanks for your patience.

    78. Triassic
    dinosaurs get their start about 235 million years ago, sharing the world with all kinds of other giant reptiles, and even the earliest mammals! (16k jpeg).
    http://www.fmnh.org/exhibits/exhibit_sites/dino/Triassic.htm
    HOME Continue Tour
    245-208 Million Years Ago - A devastating mass extinction opens the Triassic. Dinosaurs get their start about 235 million years ago, sharing the world with all kinds of other giant reptiles, and even the earliest mammals!
    (16k jpeg)
    Earliest Dinosaurs Band Together
    Herrerasaurus hisses a surrender, giving up its hard-won prey to some lumbering reptile relatives. Here in Argentina 230 million years ago, dinosaurs are still small, still a minority. Hunting in groups, they battle their larger, stronger kin for food and turf. Dial 1-900-CLIMATE for the Triassic forecast. (367k au audio) See one of the oldest known dinosaurs, Herrerasaurus Who finds dinosaurs

    79. Dinosaurs The Biblical And Scientific Case For And About Them
    Five articles on the ARK Foundation Virtual Museum science page.
    http://www.arky.org/museum/science/life/dinosaur.htm
    The ARK Virtual Science Museum Virtual
    Museum
    Dinosaurs
    The Biblical and Scientific Case for and about them.
    By Ron Cooper
    Master Index Real
    Science
    Life Click the dinosaur graphic to get a large scale graphic or to return to this page from articles. All articles below are about dinosaurs.
  • Behemoth
  • Lumpers and Splitters
  • A Rose by Any Other Name?
  • What Did They Eat Anyway? ...
  • Dayton Dragons Supported by: The ARK Foundation of Dayton, Inc. a non profit organization since June 1995, We support true science and Biblical religion. Email: ARKY Webmaster This site is scanned for viruses daily. This document was last modified 9:02 PM 2/11/2000
  • 80. DINOBASE, Dinosaur Database, Dinopage
    rex © J. Sibbick Dinobase Web Pages created by Samira Cuny and Mike Benton Dinobase is a dinosaur database with a list of dinosaurs, a classification of
    http://palaeo.gly.bris.ac.uk/dinobase/dinopage.html
    Picture Tyrannosaurus rex
    Dinobase Web Pages created by Samira Cuny and Mike Benton
    Dinobase is a dinosaur database with a list of dinosaurs, a classification of dinosaurs, pictures, and more... Welcome to Dinobase How did dinosaurs live? Why did dinosaurs die out Walking with dinosaurs ... NEW 2002: Dinosaur supertree

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