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Images for the New
Lone Star Dinosaurs Exhibit
Click images to enlarge.
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The rubbings of cross-bedding patterns in the sandstone will later be taken to the Lab section of the Lone Star Dinosaurs exhibit for analysis and interpretation. |
| © Fort Worth Museum of Science and History |
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| Rubbings of ammonites capture the patterns of these fossils; this information will be taken to the Lab section of the Lone Star Dinosaurs exhibit for analysis and interpretation. |
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© Fort Worth Museum of Science and History |
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The skull of a pawpawsaurus, a type of nodosaur discovered by a 19-year-old in Fort Worth, Texas. |
| © Fort Worth Museum of Science and History |
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| A 7-year-old boy and his dad discovered the skull of this dinosaur, Tenontosaurus dossi, while out exploring on a ranch near Weatherford, Texas. The exhibit displays the full skeleton from the early Cretaceous period, excavated by the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History. |
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© Fort Worth Museum of Science and History |
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In the Lab, visitors make sense of the raw data they gathered at the Field Site, using computer programs, powerful microscopes, and fossil and bone collections. |
© Hands On! Inc.,
Photograph by Frank Baptie |
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| Visitors use a measuring stick and laser-beam level to determine the vertical location of dinosaur bones in the Field Site. |
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© Fort Worth Museum of Science and History |
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