Activities
Visit
a Dinosaur Internet Museum
There are
two kinds of museums that you can visit with your class: an actual museum
of fossils or an Internet museum. In both kinds of visits, you should
direct your students toward particular goals. These goals may include
answers to the following:
- How is
the museum arranged? (Is it arranged according to the ages of the dinosaurs?
Is it arranged according to the types of dinosaurs? Is it arranged according
to the types of biomes inhabited by the dinosaurs?)
- What can
we learn by looking at the dinosaur bones?
- We
can learn how the bones were preserved (fossilized): often by permineralization,
or the including of minerals in the microscopic spaces of the bones.
- We
can learn about the sizes of the dinosaurs: usually a museum has
at least one bone that can be touched for measurement. The diapsid
holes in the heads of the big meateaters, meant that they did not
have to hold as much weight with their necks. The short necks of
the big- headed carnivores gave them a strong base for the weight
of those heads. The long tail acted as a counterbalance. Grooves
in the plates of a stegosaur probably held blood vessels that helped
the dinosaur either release heat or gain heat.
- What can
we learn about dinosaur lifestyle?
- What can
we learn about dinosaur walking style?
- What can
we learn about the dinosaur eating? Could they chew?
- Are there
any modern animals that use the same kinds of defense that some of the
dinosaurs used?
- You can
visit the Honolulu Community College Dinosaur Exhibit.
http://www.hcc.hawaii.edu/hccinfo/dinos/dinos.1.html
For additional
activities visit the Resource
Room.
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