Almost everyday, one of things that I like to do is go to Google news and do a search for "dinosaur" to see what's going on in the world of dinosaurs, and everyday the same thing happens: half the stories aren't actually about dinosaurs.
When I went into the Tesco supermarket today, I was pretty amazed to see a picture of Compsognathus on the front cover of the Times. Apparently two researchers at the University Manchester developed a computer model which they used to calculate the running speed of various dinosaurs: Allosaurus, Tyrannosaurus Rex, Velociraptor, Dilophosaurus, and as you'd probably guessed, Compsognathus.
Here's the 3rd article that I published on article sites such as Go Articles. As with the previous two articles, this article is available for reprint on your web site, ezine or blog. If you want to reprint, the only conditions are that (1) you may not make any changes to the article [corrections for typos are okay, provided you tell me about them], (2) you must publish the whole article including the links/URLs and copyright statement, (3) The links URLs must be hyperlinked, clickable and you may not use NOFOLLOW. The third of those conditions is obviously inapplicable for plain-text ezines.
Here's the 2nd article that I published on GoArticles and elsewhere. As with the previous article, this article is available for reprint on your web site, ezine or blog. If you want to reprint, the only conditions are that (1) you may not make any changes to the article [corrections for typos are okay, provided you tell me about them], (2) you must publish the whole article including the links/URLs and copyright statement, (3) The links URLs must be hyperlinked, clickable and you may not use NOFOLLOW. The third of those conditions is obviously inapplicable for plain-text ezines.
I recently wrote several articles about dinosaurs which I've published on article sites such as Go Articles, and which you can reprint on your website, ezine or blog. The only conditions are that (1) you may not make any changes to the article [corrections for typos are okay, provided you tell me about them], (2) you must publish the whole article including the links/URLs and copyright statement, (3) The links URLs must be hyperlinked, clickable and you may not use NOFOLLOW. The third of those conditions is obviously inapplicable for plain-text ezines.
Breaking news today is that fossil bones from a titanosaur that was found in Australia have gone on display at the Queensland Museum. The bone is believed to have come from a specimen that was perhaps as long as 28 meters (92 feet), which greatly exceeds the largest titanosaurus previously found in Australia which was "only" an estimated 18 meters (59 feet) long.
Workers constructing a leisure facility in Japan found a fossil containing dinosaur skin. This is an extremely rare find as skin is not usually preserved in fossils as it generally rots away when an animal dies. In this case, what was found, are scales around 1/8 to 1/4 inches (3 to 5 millimetres) in size.