At last: here we go on the sixth post of our Denver Gem and Mineral
Show series! Even though I went with my friend Masaki Kleinkopf a few months ago, I
still
have a large number of picture that I am eager to share with you. If
you are interested in reading about the other posts in this series, feel
free to check out the Homebase for the series HERE, with links to all of the other posts in the series that have been created thus far! Today we will be looking at the dinosaurs, as well as an ancient relative! Fasten your seat belts, everyone!
Here we have the skull of Allosaurus! We have discussed Allosaurus extensively, especially in our 23-Fact Tuesday post, so click HERE to learn more about this fascinating creature!
A dinosaur who needs no introduction, but, as you can see, I am introducing him anyways: Tyrannosaurus rex! I believe the second picture is of the foot of Tyrannosaurus, but I am not one hundred percent positive.
Psittacosaurus, one of the most primitive ceratopsian dinosaurs known to science. It doesn't even have a frill or horns! So how do we know that it is a ceratopsian dinosaur? It has an extra bone on its upper jaw called the rostral. It is this bone that distinguishes the ceratopsians from the other groups of dinosaurs.
Another dinosaur foot, this one belonging to Diplodocus, a large sauropod from the Late Jurassic Period, whose remains are found in the Morrison Formation.
Some fossil footprints that I am guessing belong to a theropod dinosaur, but I don't actually know.
Some fossil bones of a hadrosaur known as Edmontosaurus. Here is what the card says: "Edmontosaurus sp. Cervical vertebrae and bone. Lance Formation. Maastrichtian. Late Cretaceous. Niobrara County, Wyoming."
Some teeth belonging to the massive carnivorous dinosaur Carcharodontosaurus. Up at the top of the picture, you can see a few from Spinosaurus, as well.
Various teeth and claws from the Rocky Mountain Dinosaur Resource Center (RMDRC) booth.
This last guy, Desmatosuchus, is not actually a dinosaur, but a type of archosaur. Although it looks quite fierce, Desmatosuchus belongs to an order of Late Triassic herbivores called the aetosaurs. Desmatosuchus in particular has been found in Texas, and was around 15 or 16 feet in length.
Showing posts with label Denver Gem and Mineral Show. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Denver Gem and Mineral Show. Show all posts
Sunday, January 13, 2013
The Denver Gem and Mineral Show Part 6: Dinosaurs and Their Ancient Relatives
Thursday, October 11, 2012
The Denver Gem and Mineral Show Part 2: The Piscivores (Excepting Penguins)
As we started talking about a few weeks ago, my friend Masaki Kleinkopf and I were able to visit the Denver Gem and Mineral Show at the Denver Merchandise Mart. Last time, we talked about the giant ammonites, the baby eryops that Dr. Robert Bakker was working on, the gliding Indonesian lizards of the genus Draco and the pterosaurs that evolved from creatures purportedly much like this millions of years ago. Today, we are going to talk about all of the piscivorous animals that we saw there, except for the fossil penguin that I saw there. Knowing me, that would easily take up one whole post of its own there. Keep in mind throughout this post that I'm not certain for all of these animals that they actually eat fish, I just know that the large groups that they belong to often eat fish. Today, we are going to be looking at the mosasaurs, crocodilians, pterosaurs, sea lions, other fish, sharks, and the dreaded piscivorous dinosaur Spinosaurus.
MESSAGE FROM ZACK FROM THE FUTURE: Hello, everyone. This is Zack Neher. I have travelled to this post from the future. I wanted to give you a link to the Homebase for these posts. I am like Rose Tyler, leaving clues in the form of Bad Wolf. Except this is not quite like that at all really. Anyways. The Homebase for the series is HERE.
Myself next to a gigantic mosasaur skull |
I am pretty sure that this is the skull of a mosasaur , anyway.....it looks more like a mosasaur skull than the skull of a crocodilian, if you ask me |
A mosasaur jaw, from Morocco by the looks of it |
A mosasaur skull (Platecarpus, if memory serves, but it is entirely possible that I am wildly off) in front of a fossil ray |
Another huge mosasaur skull |
We also got to see the teeth of a piscivorous pterosaur. The teeth of a piscivore are usually different from those of other carnivorous animals due to their conical shape. The teeth of the fish eaters, like those of crocodilians and dolphins, are usually conical in shape, to prevent prey from struggling out of their grasp.
The teeth of a piscivorous pterosaurs |
Below are the skulls of various crocodilians.
The skulls of these dudes seem like they should be out of a cartoon or something, they are so weird and comic looking! |
Imagotaria sp., from the Miocene to Pliocene in the Atacama region of Chile |
Imagotaria sp., from the Miocene to Pliocene in the Atacama region of Chile |
Next, a picture of a pair of fossil jellyfish!
Fossil jellyfish! |
be. (Did you see that alliteration? My language arts teacher would be most impressed). I discuss both Spinosaurus and Carcharodontosaurus in two previous posts, which you can look at HERE FOR SPINOSAURUS and HERE FOR SPINOSAURUS AND CARCHARODONTOSAURUS.
The teeth of Spinosaurus. Actually in this shot, it looks as if most or all of these teeth belong to Spinosaurus. |
And now for some pictures of the teeth of Megalodon, the largest shark that is ever known to have lived! I have talked about Megalodon in the past, click HERE to learn more.
Now for some random ones.
It's a fish eat fish world out there |
A pair of shark jaws. I am not certain as I don't remember at all and they are unlabeled, but I believe them to be jaws of sand tiger sharks. Again, I could be totally off on this! |
Labels:
Africa,
Chile,
Cretaceous,
Crocodilian,
Denver Gem and Mineral Show,
Dinosaur,
Fish,
Megalodon,
Miocene,
Morocco,
Mosasaur,
Piscivore,
Pliocene,
Pterosaur,
Sea Lion,
Shark,
Spinosaurus,
United States
Thursday, September 20, 2012
The Denver Gem and Mineral Show Part 1: Giant Ammonites, Burrowing Amphibians and Leaping Lizards
On Sunday, the 16th, my friend Masaki Kleinkopf and I visited the Denver Gem and Mineral Show at the Denver Merchandise Mart. It was a ton of fun! They had booths from all over the place, like the Morrison Natural History Museum and the Rocky Mountain Dinosaur Resource Center, an excellent dinosaur museum up in Woodland Park near Colorado Springs! One of the most exciting things by far was when a pair of women came up to us, and asked if they could film us just going about our business. They were part of a group making a movie under the working title "Quarry." It's apparently going to be about American Paleontology, and it looks like Masaki and I may have made the part about why Americans love paleontology, and especially dinosaurs, so much!
MESSAGE FROM ZACK FROM THE FUTURE: Hello, everyone. This is Zack Neher. I have travelled to this post from the future. I wanted to give you a link to the Homebase for these posts. I am like Rose Tyler, leaving clues in the form of Bad Wolf. Except this is not quite like that at all really. Anyways. The Homebase for the series is HERE.
We also saw Dr. Robert Bakker there. After I said hello, he waved me over and said "You're a smart kid. Can you tell me where the nostrils are on this thing?" The "thing" that he was referring to was a baby Eryops skeleton that he has been working on, a Permian amphibian that lived in the south eastern United States. Remains have been discovered in both Texas and New Mexico, and it was a contemporary of Dimetrodon, who most likely preyed upon it. Upon my examination, I promptly tried to prove his assessment of my intelligence wrong, as I pointed all over the skull in my attempts to locate the nostrils. Turns out, the nostrils were right where they should be. They were just confusing because in life, the animal would have been able to cover the nostrils with little flaps of bone, sealing off the nostrils from dirt and such while it was burrowing. Pretty interesting stuff!
We also saw a number of giant ammonites. Below are a few pictures of the better ones, probably the largest I have ever seen! The only other possible contender that I can think of was one that I saw at the Heritage Museum of the Texas Hill Country in (you guessed it!) Texas. That one was a huge, probably five or six feet wide, imprint of an ammonite, right outside the entrance to the museum. This was the same place that I have talked about before, in my Acrocanthosaurus on the Prowl post. Great place! I definitely recommend checking it out if you are ever in the Canyon Lake/San Antonio area of Texas!
The third really cool thing that we saw there (that I am going to include in this post, at least) were these preserved lizards. These lizards are from the genus Draco, and are found exclusively in Indonesia. These lizards are remarkable as they can glide from tree to tree. Many paleontologists and biologists speculate that this is what the earliest Pterosaurs would have looked like. For those of you who don't know, Pterosaurs are the flying reptiles that were contemporaneous with the dinosaurs. Often confused with the dinosaurs themselves, the Pterosaurs were distinct in that they were truly flying reptiles, and not a distinct grouping. Calling Pterosaurs dinosaurs would be akin to calling a tiger salamander a mammal, on the sole observation that the tiger salamander is a contemporary of a squirrel. Not so.
Famous examples of Pterosaurs include (or "Pterosaurs That I Have Heard Of):
Anyways, in the Imax production "Flying Monsters" with David Attenborough (FAVORITE. IMAX. EVER.), they talk about how many scientists speculate that these lizards of the genus Draco greatly resemble the earliest ancestors of the Pterosaurs. Initially gliding from tree to tree to snatch flying insects in the air, eventually these small lizards would have become capable of powered flight. Then, they would have grown larger and larger, until they became the biggest animals to ever take to the skies. Except for humans, but really. We don't really count.
MESSAGE FROM ZACK FROM THE FUTURE: Hello, everyone. This is Zack Neher. I have travelled to this post from the future. I wanted to give you a link to the Homebase for these posts. I am like Rose Tyler, leaving clues in the form of Bad Wolf. Except this is not quite like that at all really. Anyways. The Homebase for the series is HERE.
Creeper shot of the film crew following us, with a large iridescent ammonite in the foreground. Notice the distinct chambers. How magnificent. |
We also saw Dr. Robert Bakker there. After I said hello, he waved me over and said "You're a smart kid. Can you tell me where the nostrils are on this thing?" The "thing" that he was referring to was a baby Eryops skeleton that he has been working on, a Permian amphibian that lived in the south eastern United States. Remains have been discovered in both Texas and New Mexico, and it was a contemporary of Dimetrodon, who most likely preyed upon it. Upon my examination, I promptly tried to prove his assessment of my intelligence wrong, as I pointed all over the skull in my attempts to locate the nostrils. Turns out, the nostrils were right where they should be. They were just confusing because in life, the animal would have been able to cover the nostrils with little flaps of bone, sealing off the nostrils from dirt and such while it was burrowing. Pretty interesting stuff!
Dr. Bakker's baby Eryops. The snout is facing the pen in the left of the image, and the two holes that you can see are the orbitals, or the eye sockets. The googly eyes are explained below. |
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Another picture from a few weeks ago. This was taken at the Morrison Museum when my friend Kristie Chua came up to visit. Dr. Bakker, when asked "Why the googly eyes?" replied "I put the googly eyes on because I like it." |
We also saw a number of giant ammonites. Below are a few pictures of the better ones, probably the largest I have ever seen! The only other possible contender that I can think of was one that I saw at the Heritage Museum of the Texas Hill Country in (you guessed it!) Texas. That one was a huge, probably five or six feet wide, imprint of an ammonite, right outside the entrance to the museum. This was the same place that I have talked about before, in my Acrocanthosaurus on the Prowl post. Great place! I definitely recommend checking it out if you are ever in the Canyon Lake/San Antonio area of Texas!
The ammonites, in order of amazingness. Probably about a two, two and a half foot diameter. |
Same story as above. Not as impressive in size, but amazing in preservation quality. Check out those septum! |
Masaki next to one big ass ammonite! |
And Masaki with another big ass one! This one a bigger ass! Bigger ass one? Bigger one. A bigger one. |
One specimen of the Draco lizards.... |
....and another! |
- Anurognathus
- Darwinopterus
- Dimorphodon
- Dsungaripterus
- Eopteranodon
- Eudimorphodon
- Hatzegopteryx
- Ornithocheirus
- Peteinosaurus
- Pteranodon
- Pterodactylus
- Pterodaustro
- Quetzalcoatlus
- Rhamphorhynchus
- Sordes
- Tapejara
- Tropeognathus
A skull of Darwinopterus from the show. This guy was at the booth for the Rocky Mountain Dinosaur Resource Center, or RMDRC for short, an awesome museum up in Woodland Park. |
A fossil pterosaur from the show |
Another fossil pterosaur from the show |
Labels:
Ammonite,
David Attenborough,
Denver Gem and Mineral Show,
Dinosaur,
Draco,
Giraffe,
Hatzegopteryx,
Indonesia,
Lizard,
Masaki Kleinkopf,
New Mexico,
Pterosaur,
Quarry,
Reptile,
Robert T. Bakker,
Texas,
United States
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