Images for the New
Lone Star Dinosaurs Exhibit
Click images to enlarge.

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

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.
© Fort Worth Museum of Science and History

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

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.
© Fort Worth Museum of Science and History

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
Visitors use a measuring stick and laser-beam level to determine the vertical location of dinosaur bones in the Field Site.
© Fort Worth Museum of Science and History



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