Welcome to this edition of DINOSAURNEWS - the international Dinosaur Site with Bite! This Week's Headlines: (For the FULL STORY visit the NEWS section of the webzine at this address: http://www.dinosaurnews.org ) ** 3D Fossils from the Isle of Wight go worldwide Dinosaur Isle Museum in Sandown will soon have many of its Isle of Wight fossils on display in full 3D imagery as part of a major national scheme ** Dinosaur excavation sites inundated by China flood Flooding in northeast China has inundated famous dinosaur excavation sites and a local museum as workers worry dinosaur fossils may be swept away ** Small dinosaurs show T. rex's bite marks Experts who didn't participate in the study said there was already ample evidence that T. rex went after live animals as well as scavenging carcasses ** Jurassic Park: the truth about dinosaurs Fossils of multiple Deinonychus (a creature similar in some ways to the Velociraptor) have been found in proximity to each other, but there's no reason to think just because they are preserved together they habitually lived together -------------------------------------------------------------------- FREE SUBSCRIPTION to Dinosaurnews- http://goo.gl/rmPWE -------------------------------------------------------------------- ** Dinosaur artifacts from recent Montana dig arrive at Kenosha museum Project leaders Thomas Carr, an associate professor of biology and director of the Carthage Institute of Paleontology, and Nick Wiersum, curator of education for the dinosaur museum, uncovered bone fragments of a 2-year-old tyrannosaurus and a 600-pound piece of the frill of a triceratops in a remote Hell Creek Formation range in southeastern Montana ** Outback Qld dinosaur museum makes world architecture finals The Australian Age of Dinosaurs museum in outback Queensland has made it to the finals of a world architecture contest for the second consecutive year ** Dinosaur hunter Philip Currie has museum named after him Philip Currie, the renowned Alberta paleontologist who helped put the Grande Prairie area on the map as a dinosaur-hunter's paradise, is having a museum named in his honour ** Ostrich necks provide clues to how sauropod dinosaurs moved, ate A new study suggests that model doesn't convey the whole picture because it doesn't fully consider how soft tissues like cartilage and muscle - absent from dinosaur bones but available for study in extant animals - might have influenced flexibility ----------------------------------------------------------------- JOIN US ON FACEBOOK - http://goo.gl/muTJM ----------------------------------------------------------------- ** Research is challenging basic assumptions about dinosaurs Excavating the bones from the soft shale, the researchers use the same implements fossil hunters have wielded for more than 100 years - trowels, paint scrapers and dental picks - but they also have access to tools and techniques that are thoroughly modern ** Dinosaur Hunters Return For Field Season Composed of researchers from Fairbanks, Japan, Korea and Texas, the team was helicoptered into wilderness in the Riley Creek area to look for footprints laid down 70 million years ago ** 10 best places to see dinosaurs From science museums to excavation sites to animatronic displays, would-be paleontologists can satisfy their curiosity at these sites across North America ** Sharks vs. Dinosaurs: Deadly Encounters Sharks and dinosaurs were both prevalent during the same periods, but did they ever encounter each other? Recent evidence suggests that they likely did ------------------------------------------------------------- FOLLOW US ON TWITTER - http://www.twitter.com/mydinosaurnews ------------------------------------------------------------- ** Researchers make big dinosaur discovery at Billings Clinic Making this breakthrough on a 150-million-year-old fossil has taken a countless number of man hours and dedication ** The Subtle Mysteries Of Dinosaur Sex The big guy's big guy would be inside the cloaca, which would have looked, from the outside like a slit beneath the dinosaur's tail ** Fresh analysis of dinosaur skulls finds 3 species are 1 A new analysis of dinosaur fossils by University of Pennsylvania researchers has revealed that a number of specimens of the genus Psittacosaurus - once believed to represent three different species - are all members of a single species ** The Top Ten Weirdest Dinosaur Extinction Ideas Paleontologists, both professional and amateur, have dreamed up some bizarre explanations of how the dinosaurs disappeared from Earth ------------------------------------------------------------- PIN US ON PINTEREST - http://pinterest.com/globalmuseum/dinosaurs/ ------------------------------------------------------------- ** U of Alberta joins the world of open online education with free dinosaur course Over a 12-week period, Dino 101 will teach students about the non-avian dinosaurs that roamed the Earth, some 250 to 65 million years ago, during the Mesozoic Era ** Museum crowd hears latest area dino research Stein, a commercial paleontologist who has made significant discoveries in the Belle Fourche and Tri-State area, gave his audience updates on the latest research into dinosaurs, including the big Tyrannosaurus rex that roamed the area millions of years ago ** 10th North American Paleontological Convention Here's an opportunity for those of you interested in digitization technologies to present your research at the 10th North American Paleontological Convention! All this and more in DINOSAUREWS. Published since 1998 http://www.dinosaurnews.org/ ========================================================= Important Subscriber Information: The Museum-L FAQ file is located at http://www.finalchapter.com/museum-l-faq/ . You may obtain detailed information about the listserv commands by sending a one line e-mail message to [log in to unmask] . The body of the message should read "help" (without the quotes). If you decide to leave Museum-L, please send a one line e-mail message to [log in to unmask] . The body of the message should read "Signoff Museum-L" (without the quotes).