slgwv's photos with the keyword: ichthyosaur
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29 May 2014 |
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29 May 2014 |
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Fossil Display
29 May 2014 |
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A hands-on interpretive display in the Fossil House, Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park, Nevada, USA.
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29 May 2014 |
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29 May 2014 |
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09 Feb 2012 |
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06-fossil_house_ig_adj
09 Feb 2012 |
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09 Feb 2012 |
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09 Feb 2012 |
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This way to the ichthyosaurs!
29 May 2014 |
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To the Fossil House, Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park, Nevada, USA. They've built a shelter over a world-class display of ichthyosaur fossils. Ichthyosaurs were (more or less) the reptile equivalent of dolphins (porpoises); they looked like fish and were marine but were air-breathing. The ichthyosaur here is Shonisaurus popularis of late Triassic age. It's named from the Shoshone Mtns where the fossils occur.
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29 May 2014 |
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29 May 2014 |
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IMG_2234
29 May 2014 |
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Ichthyosaur tail vertebrae
29 May 2014 |
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Outside the main Fossil House, Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park, Nevada, USA. They've built a shelter over a world-class display of ichthyosaur fossils. Ichthyosaurs were (more or less) the reptile equivalent of dolphins (porpoises); they looked like fish and were marine but were air-breathing. The ichthyosaur here is Shonisaurus popularis of late Triassic age. It's named from the Shoshone Mtns where the fossils occur.
This section the rangers cover with a thin layer of dirt and then let the kids use whisk brooms to sweep it off, so they can "discover" a fossil! Kind of a nice interactive idea.
IMG_2235
29 May 2014 |
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IMG_2233
29 May 2014 |
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IMG_2227
29 May 2014 |
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Ichthyosaur tail vertebrae (close up)
29 May 2014 |
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Outside the main Fossil House, Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park, Nevada, USA. They've built a shelter over a world-class display of ichthyosaur fossils. Ichthyosaurs were (more or less) the reptile equivalent of dolphins (porpoises); they looked like fish and were marine but were air-breathing. The ichthyosaur here is Shonisaurus popularis of late Triassic age. It's named from the Shoshone Mtns where the fossils occur.
This section the rangers cover with a thin layer of dirt and then let the kids use whisk brooms to sweep it off, so they can "discover" a fossil! Kind of a nice interactive idea.
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