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Re: Happy Birthday, T. rex!



No cheeks either so it would probably crumble out the sides. Hard to wash it down too!
Frank (Rooster) Bliss



On Oct 5, 2005, at 3:29 PM, Ken.Carpenter@dmns.org wrote:

No matter, he/she/it will eat the whole thing in one bite (and a few
guests standing too close).

Kenneth Carpenter, Ph.D.
Curator of Lower Vertebrate Paleontology/
Chief Preparator
Department of Earth Sciences
Denver Museum of Nature & Science
2001 Colorado Blvd.
Denver, CO 80205

Phone: 303-370-6392
Fax: 303-331-6492
************************************************************
for PDFs of some of my publications, as well as information of the Cedar
Mountain Project:
https://scientists.dmns.org/sites/kencarpenter/default.aspx


-----Original Message-----
From: owner-dinosaur@usc.edu [mailto:owner-dinosaur@usc.edu] On Behalf
Of Neal Romanek
Sent: Wednesday, October 05, 2005 3:28 PM
To: tholtz@umd.edu
Cc: dinosaur@usc.edu
Subject: Re: Happy Birthday, T. rex!

Drat. No lips and all those candles to blow out!


On Oct 5, 2005, at 5:11 AM, Thomas R. Holtz, Jr. wrote:

Greetings,

A good day in tyrannosaurid studies! 100 years ago today, the initial
description of Tyrannosaurus rex, its junior synonym
Dynamosaurus imperiosus, and Albertosaurus sarcophagus was published.

Happy Centennial, guys!

                Thomas R. Holtz, Jr.
        Senior Lecturer, Vertebrate Paleontology
Department of Geology           Director, Earth, Life & Time Program
University of Maryland          College Park Scholars
        Mailing Address:
                Building 237, Room 1117
                College Park, MD  20742

http://www.geol.umd.edu/~tholtz/
http://www.geol.umd.edu/~jmerck/eltsite
Phone:  301-405-4084    Email:  tholtz@geol.umd.edu
Fax (Geol):  301-314-9661       Fax (CPS-ELT): 301-405-0796


--Neal

http://www.nealromanek.com