Patricia Barnes-Svarney

The Handy Dinosaur Answer Book


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href="#ulink_1638a943-650f-5438-aa4c-fe015ee26045">Other Life during the Triassic

       JURASSIC PERIOD

       Important Jurassic Dinosaurs

       Saurischian Dinosaurs

       Ornithischian Dinosaurs

       General Jurassic Dinosaur Facts

       Other Life in the Jurassic

       CRETACEOUS PERIOD

       Important Cretaceous Dinosaurs

       Saurischian Dinosaurs

       Ornithischian

       General Cretaceous Dinosaur Facts

       Other Life in the Cretaceous

       DINOSAURS INSIDE AND OUT

       Growing Bones

       Abnormal Dinosaur Bones

       Dinosaur Skin

       Teeth and Claws

       Dinosaur Metabolism

       Dinosaur Size

       DINOSAUR BEHAVIOR

       Eating Habits

       Dinosaurs in Motion

       Dinosaur Babies

       Mature Dinosaurs

       Dinosaur Quirks

       THE END OF DINOSAURS

       The Cretaceous Extinction

       Theories about Dinosaur Extinction

       The Impact Theory

       Other Extinction Theories

       DINOSAUR CONNECTIONS

       Aftermath of Extinction

       From Dinosaurs to Birds

       Dinosaurs All around Us

       The Search for the Missing Link

       DINOSAUR DISCOVERIES IN NORTH AMERICA

       Early Dinosaur History in the United States

       Recent Discoveries in the United States

       Famous Paleontologists from North America

       INTERNATIONAL DINOSAUR DISCOVERIES

       Early Dinosaur History outside the United States

       Dinosaur Discoveries

       Famous Paleontologists outside North America

       LEARNING MORE ABOUT DINOSAURS

       How to Find Dinosaur Bones

       Digging Up Fossils

       Putting Dinosaurs Together

       Learning Paleontology

       Resources

       Dinosaur Web Sites

       INDEX

      Introduction

      Ten years is a long time in science; there are so many discoveries and new technologies that change and add to the overall scientific field. It’s no different in paleontology—especially in the study of dinosaurs.

      So now, for you, the dinosaur enthusiast, we present the new, colorful, and very updated second edition of The Handy Dinosaur Answer Book. One of the best parts of revising and updating a book is going through all the feedback we’ve heard/read over the years. And there’s no doubt about it: this book seems to be a favorite of dinosaur lovers from 6 to 96!

      One of the reasons for this fascination with the great creatures has not changed in 10 years: How in the world did something as big as a house—and sometimes ferocious—roam Earth so many millions of years ago? Admittedly, the land has changed over the past 65 million years since the dinosaurs died out, but just to think that an Allosaurus or Gigantosaurus may have once stomped in your own backyard never fails to send chills up our collective human spines.

      There are other reasons for dinosaur enthusiasm, especially with so many global discoveries made in the past decade: the discovery of fossilized dinosaur organs; whole or parts of dinosaur eggs and nests; imprints of dinosaur blood vessels; feather imprints galore; attempts to extract DNA from dinosaur remains; and large caches of fossils in rock formations previously thought to be devoid of dinosaur bones. There are also more and more large-boned dinosaur fossils that pop up every year, keeping alive the “size competition” between the big carnivores like the Tyrannosaurus rex and sauropods like the Brachiosaurus. How could anyone who’s a dinosaur enthusiast not be excited about such amazing discoveries?

      This newly revised The Handy Dinosaur Answer Book answers over 600 of your questions about these extinct creatures, such as: From what animals did the dinosaurs evolve? Who found the first dinosaur remains? What other plants and animals lived during the time of the dinosaurs? What dinosaur remains show a heart? What are the largest—and smallest—dinosaur fossils known at this time? How did scientists extract DNA from a Tyrannosaurus rex bone? Are birds really dinosaurs? Did the first dinosaurs have feathers? Why are