A team of researchers from the University of Bristol, Natural History Museum of London, the University of Missouri and Ohio University has discovered the eating habits of Diplodocus using a ...
On July 4, 1899, the steel tycoon Andrew Carnegie finally got his Diplodocus. He had set his eye on this fossil prize in the fall of the previous year when the New York Journal ran a fanciful ...
A skeletal reconstruction depicting the old, tail-dragging image of Diplodocus. Image from Wikipedia. One century ago, when paleontologists were still just becoming acquainted with the great dinosaurs ...
Sorry Dippy, but your days of scaring the bejesus out of millions of school kids are nearly over. After 35 years of service, the huge skeleton of a Diplodocus is being retired from its leading role at ...
LONDON (Reuters) - The skeleton of a diplodocus dinosaur that roamed what is now the United States some 160 million years ago was sold for 400,000 pounds ($651,100) to an unidentified public ...
The story of our Diplodocus cast goes back more than a hundred years. We take a look back at its long life as one of the best-loved exhibits in the history of the Museum. The Museum's Diplodocus ...
For giant dinosaurs like the 25-ton Diplodocus—an iconic long-necked herbivore—feeding all that flesh was a full-time job. And now we know how the beast did it. An international paleontology team used ...
Dippy the Diplodocus has had pride of place in the Natural History Museum's main hall for more than 30 years The dinosaur -- a replica cast from fossils unearthed in Wyoming in 1898 -- will be ...
See more of our trusted coverage when you search. Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. Over 2,000 miles from the Museum of Natural History in New York City, ...
It is the issue that has been on everyone's lips this week. As the Natural History Museum announced it is to move Dippy the Dinosaur to make way for the skeleton of a blue whale, the age old debate on ...
The Natural History Museum in London is removing the model diplodocus skeleton which has stood in its entrance hall for 44 years. But how should the creature's name be pronounced, asks Justin ...
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