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See them, before they become extinct
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TitleSee them, before they become extinct
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TranscriptOffice of University Relations SDSM& T News 501 E. St. Joseph Street Rapid City, SD 57701- 3995 Phone: ( 605) 394- 6082/ 2554 Fax: ( 605) 394- 6177 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE August 30, 2001 Contact: Steve Buchholz, Public Information Manager, ( 605) 394- 6082 See Them... Before They Become Extinct This weekend is your last chance to see two dinosaur exhibits before they become extinct. The Great Russian Dinosaurs and the Dinosaurs of Darkness end their six- month run in Rapid City on Sunday, Sept. 2. The exhibits are on display on the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology campus and at the Children's Science Center in downtown Rapid City. The exhibits are open 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. Saturday, Sept. 1, and 1 p. m. to 4 p. m. Sunday, Sept. 2. Admission for the exhibits is $ 3 for a single visit to one of the locations. You may also purchase a $ 5 two- visit pass that allows you to visit both sites. The exhibits cover more than 10, 000- square- feet and include more than 20 complete skeletons, more than 25 skulls and dozens of bones, teeth and other fossils. Highlights include: The complete skeleton of a 45- foot- long carnivorous tarbosaurus, mounted to show it in full pursuit of a speedy, 12- foot- long ostrich- like dinosaur called gallimimus. Clutches of dinosaur eggs that show that the largest dinosaurs that ever lived the long- necked sauropods began life as hatchlings small enough to hold in your hand. Skeletons of an adult and baby protoceratops one of the best- known dinosaurs and the ancestor of the three- horned triceratops. A collection of mammal- like reptiles that includes a predatory, bear- like reptile with saber teeth, and a warm- blooded, horned reptile the size of a modern rhinoceros. Fossils from Tech's Museum of Geology collection. - MORE- - PAGE 2- The exhibit will take visitors on a trip across the threshold of time to a moment millions of years before the earliest dinosaurs, when the planet was cooler and more arid, and the dominant life forms were strange mammal- like reptiles and amphibians. These creatures thrived 245 to 290 million years ago and are the ancestors of all modern mammals. The trip winds its way through the rise and fall of the dinosaurs. The dinosaurs began their ascendancy only when a mass extinction wiped out 95 percent of all marine species and many of the life forms that lived on land. The dinosaurs ruled the Earth for 100 million years until they met extinction. The Great Russian Dinosaurs and Dinosaurs of Darkness exhibits tell those stories through what remains of those great ages. Scientists found the fossils during the past 200 years near the Ural Mountains in Russia, in the Gobi Desert in Mongolia and near the North and South poles. The exhibits are truly world- class. They have been shown at some of the world's best- known museums, including the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum, the Monash Science Center in Australia, and at museums in Chicago and Philadelphia. ++ 30++ ( I: univrel/ pressrel/ 0700 )
CreatorSouth Dakota School of Mines and Technology. University Relations
SubjectSouth Dakota School of Mines and Technology
Local SubjectSouth Dakota School of Mines and Technology
Children's Science Center
Digital PublisherSouth Dakota School of Mines and Technology. Devereaux Library
ContributorsBuchholz, Steve;
Date2001-08-30
TypeText
Formatapplication/pdf
Languageeng
RelationIs part of Office of University Relations SDSM&T News Collection
RightsThe work from which this copy was made did not include a formal copyright notice. This work may be protected by U. S. copyright law (Title 17, United States Code), which governs reproduction, distribution, public display, and other uses of protected works. Uses may be allowed with permission from the copyright holder, if the copyright on the work has expired, or if the use is fair use or within another legal exemption. The user of this work is responsible for compliance with the law.
Submitting InstitutionDevereaux Library. South Dakota School of Mines and Technology.
Date Digital2009
CONTENTdm number4682
CONTENTdm file name5659.pdf
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