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Full episode of bones wars on PBS - 0 views

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    Mr.gatlin first posted it on edmodo
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    I wonder how those two scientists met each other. Why couldn't they just work together? Then they wouldn't destroyed such rare bones like they did. They would've been very successful if they had worked together.
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    After watching this video I wonder what they could have accomplished if they had worked together, and put aside their differences?
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Monster snake - 2 views

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    Emily found this video, only need to watch 6-9 and then the last 5 min!
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    Watch the first 6-9 mind the last 5 min to see what it would look like
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    If you want to watch the fight between titanaboa and a gigantic crocodile watch 38-41 and 46-50
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    That video was soon mind blowing, I love the part where the snake squeezed the crocodile to death to protect its self. I would love to see animals that large! Very informative, has to do with ancient Denver's animals.
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    the webcite was cramed. but the videos were quite helpful.
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    I loved this video!!! I watched the whole thing and it was very interesting!
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    This is a very interesting episode with good information about large snakes, but it is very dramatic. A standard science video,would have been more informative.
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    That was creepy....
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    I really thought this video was interesting! I was fascinated when the snake squeezed and killed the crocodile. It's kind of scary to think that there were snakes this big MYA!
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    It lived at around 50-60 maya. In South America
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    The fight between the croc and the snake is pretty interesting
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    It was very interesting to see how big animals were back then and how the acted. I found titanaboa a bit creepy, but interesting.
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    That was really intriguing. I knew snakes could grow up to be very large, but never big enough to swallow a cow whole! Great find!
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Bone wars - 0 views

shared by paulstone88 on 28 Nov 12 - Cached
gracemasters liked it
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    Interesting kind of
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    This was very interesting, there is a lot of big, juicy words on this website.
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    This was a useful website to learn more abut the bone wars
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Diplodocus - 0 views

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    A dinosaur in the Morrison formation
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More sauropods! - 2 views

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    On the link I posted, scroll down for EVERYTHING Dinosaurs!
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    This is great because it gets right to the point and is very easy to understand. I also like in the beginning how it said that sauropod means lizard footed.
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    This website is descriptive and interesting and exactly what we are learning about
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    I thought it was interesting that sauropods adapted to have body armor. This is a very good resource.
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    It used to be thought that the sauropods had a second brain at the base of the tail. Paleontologists now realize that what they thought was a second brain was perhaps an enlargement in the spinal cord in the hip area (although this is not universally accepted), containing nerves and fatty tissue. This enlargement was larger than the animal's tiny brain and may have controlled the animal's hind legs and tail.
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    I thought that this was an excellent resource. The information was organized in a clear way. This is a website we should look at in class.
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    This is a very resourceful website. It showed what they ate, what they looked like, species of sauropods and many other interesting facts!
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    I thought this was a really good website. It talked about many dinosaurs, there size, climate, and diet.
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    It was very interesting how the sauropods have a tiny head therefore brain and are only plant eaters. The sauropods are very huge!
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    This was a very useful website that talked about the size of the sauropods bodies and necks, what they ate, and a lot of other cool facts about them.
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    Sauropods are not heavily armed, but later versions of sauropods had some form of armor which was used as protection against other predators. Sauropods were plant eaters and had a very small brain hecause their head was very small. They were herbavores and ate mostley connifers.
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Not fossils? - 0 views

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    We are lucky we live around so many dinosaur fossils.
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Rainforest world 140 MYA - 2 views

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    Rainforest world

Cycadophytes info - 0 views

shared by evanrumsfeld on 28 Nov 12 - No Cached
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Apatosauruses - 1 views

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    Good Dino site
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    Brontosaurus was one of the largest land animals that ever existed. The dinosaur Brontosaurus is now called Apatosaurus. This enormous plant-eater measured about 70-90 feet long!!!! and about 15 feet tall at the hips.
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    This site tells about the brontosaurus which is now called apatosaurus. This dinosaur has a very small intelligence. This was a good website.
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    I never knew that some of those dinosaurs existed back then from the chart at the very bottom of the page.
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    This site helps to make easier to understand what some of the dinosaurs that existed back then are called
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    Evan, this was a very good site to learn about brontosaurus or apatosaurus. Apatosaurus have a small head which concludes that they have a small brain, and aren't the most intelligent species that had lived during their time. They had a long tail which acted as a counterbalanced to its very long neck. It also was a tool of protection from other predatorsYet the extremely long neck had advantages for a herbavore who would be constantly attacked by hungry predators. The apatosaurus was a very tall sauropod, which was taller than the allosaurus, which was a predator of the time. The allosaurus is not tall enough to try and snap at the head of the dinosaur, and it wouldn't be smart to get near a whip like like tail such as the apatosaurus's. It had a bulky body and ate rocks to help the digestion of its food.An interesting fact that i had learned was that their nostrils were located on the top of their head, but it couldn't be used as a snorkeling device because the apatosaurus lived on land and not near many big masses of water. I had peg like teeth, which resembling ones of a lizard today, and had four legs.
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    This website was very useful in talking about the apatosaurus. The apatosaurus was a plant eater (herbivore). This dinosaur had a small head and walked on four legs. The apatosaurus was one of the biggest land animals.
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Dinosaurs - 1 views

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    A website about dinosaurs and there everyday lifestyle.
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    There was a much larger variety of dinosaurs than I thought.
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    It adds the different types of the dinosaurs. Like marine and land and stuff
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    This website had a wide variety of dinosaurs. It talked about the dinosaurs habitat and there lifestyle.
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    This is a really good website because it was talking about alls of the different dinosaurs that lived in the cretacious period. in this, we also more about the sauropods, which contributed to a great amount of chatter in class disscusion. Basically what we learnd here was that sauropods had gone extinct, but their relitive, which are lightly armored, roamed all of the continents on the now changing Pangea. We learned about Avian life, plant life, and Marine life, which at the time includedearly versions of fish and sharks, which contributed a lot since all of the marine life dinosaurs before had gone extinct.
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sauropoda - 1 views

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    Long neck dinosaurs.
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    Great find, I love the picture. Very informative and relates to what we are talking about. I liked how ey are called the lizard hipped dinosaurs.
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    This is a useful website on different information about sauropods
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kpcofgs - 1 views

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    A really good sight of KPCOFGS.
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Triassic time period - 1 views

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    A greatly detailed sight... I don't know how trustworthy wikapedia is.
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Arthropleura - 0 views

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    Giant millipede information
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    this is so gross, but it is helpful
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    I think it is interesting that this is the largest invertebrate that has ever lived!
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    Good short article about Arthropleura. Arthropleura were relatives to millipedes and centipedes. The Arthropleuria's length ranged from 1-8.5 feet. It lived in what is now northeastern North America and Scotland. It was the largest known land invertebrate of all time.
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    This is a good source about how arthropleura were created, and how they are related to millipedes and centipedes.
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    Why do most people think that arthropleura were carnivorous if millipedes and centipedes aren't?
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Apatosaurus-Wikipedia - 0 views

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    This is a Wikipedia article about a type of sauropod called apatosaurus. (Website seen in 7-1 class...)
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    It is a pretty good website, well it is Wikipedia, but it explained thoroughly what a Apatosaurus was.
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    This is a great website(of course it is because its Wikipedia) but it has the perfect info about the apatosaurus
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    When we looked at the website we didn't really explore it much so it was nice to see everything on it.
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    This has really good information on the apatosaurus. It tells you everything you would need to know about this dinosaur.
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    This has very good information but I had a lot of trouble understanding it! It has a lot of fancy science words that I don't know. This could be used to learn some more science vocabulary.
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    Apatosaurus, is a genus of sauropod dinosaur that lived from about 154 to 150 million years ago, during It was one of the largest land animals known to have ever existed, with an average length of 23 m and a mass of at least 16 metric tons.
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    Wikipedia had a variety of facts which will help us in class. The information was fascinating but the website did include some details about the animal that weren't necessary.
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    The brontosaurus lived from about 154-150 million years ago.
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Morrison formation - 1 views

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    Dinos in Morrison
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    This was very helpful, I did not know there was dinosaurs in Morrison
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    In order for a fossil to form, the body must be buried quickly before weather conditions and scavengers have a chance to scatter or otherwise destroy the bone.
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    The Morrison rock formation was from about 155- 148 million years ago.
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    This website is extremely helpful and relates directly to what we are learning. We should use it in class to futher our knowledge.
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    It includes the fossils that were found.
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    This website is very good! I was surprised by how many different fossils were found there!
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    This website was really good. It was about the different fossils found, from what dinosaur they where from, and where they where mostly found.
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    Interesting site on the Morrison formation.
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    How many Dinosaurs were found there
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Report on Peirre shale - 2 views

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    Complete research paper on Peirre shale.
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Mosasaurs - 1 views

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    Look at the feedback part on the right and t gives you a quick, great definition Links on he left
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