Showing posts with label Tyrannosaurus Rex. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tyrannosaurus Rex. Show all posts

February 12 - Happy Birthday, Barnum Brown

      Posted on February 12, 2022

This is an update of my post published on February 12, 2011:



Last year I wrote about biologist Charles Darwin and U.S. President Abraham Lincoln - both of whom were hugely important - and both of whom where born on February 12, 1809.



Charles Darwin and Abraham Lincoln aren't the only folks of note born on February 12. Some other birthdays include:

Christina Ricci – 1980 – actress
Judy Blume – 1938 – author
Bill Russell – 1934 – basketball legend
Anna Pavlova – 1881 – ballerina
Barnum Brown – 1873 – paleontologist



Speaking of Barnum Brown:


Quick, think of a dinosaur species name!

Even more quickly, name a carnivorous dinosaur!


If you are like most people, you probably thought of Tyrannosaurus rex after one or both of those prompts. This giant, fierce-looking meat-eater is one of the most recognizable and iconic dinosaurs and is part of modern popular culture. But you probably didn't know the name of the guy who found the first T-rex skeletons...until now.

Born on this day in 1873, Barnum Brown was named after the circus promoter P.T. Barnum. He grew up to be a paleontologist—a scientist who collects and studies fossils. It was Brown who discovered the first two partial skeletons of Tyrannosaurus rex, although some teeth and fragments had been found earlier. (They were not enough of a specimen to be recognized and named as a separate species.)


At the time of his discoveries, Brown was the assistant curator of the American Museum of Natural History. He found the T- rex fossils in Wyoming (in 1900) and in Montana (in 1902). Tyrannosaurus rex lived all over the western portion of North America about 67 to 65.5 million years ago.

Brown collected many, many more fossils of dinosaurs and other creatures as well. He and his team used a flatboat to float down the Red Deer River in Canada in the middle 1910s, looking for promising-looking fossil sites. I find it funny that another group of fossil hunters, the Sternberg family, tried to outdo them by hunting for fossil sites on the same stretch of river in a rivalry that was apparently friendly!



How do we know what T-rex ate?

Check out the Enchanted Learning website for a lesson on dinosaur diets. 

For more on dinosaurs, try National Geographic for Kids.














August 12 - Best-est Tyrannosaurus Rex Ever!

Posted on August 12, 2021


This is an update of my post published on August 12, 2010:



August 12, 1990: Fossil hunter and explorer Susan Hendrickson discovered a skeleton in the Black Hills of South Dakota. 

It happened to be a skeleton of a Tyrannosaurus Rex.

Not only that, it happened to be THE largest, THE most complete, and THE best-preserved T. Rex skeleton ever discovered!



This T-Rex was named Sue, after its discoverer. In 1997, the skeleton was auctioned and fetched a tidy 8.36 million dollars!



The skeleton is 90% complete and is considered the best T-Rex skeleton ever found. It is 13 feet high at the hips and 42 feet long. The skull is the length of a short adult (five feet) but weighs an astonishing 2,000 pounds ( ! ), and some of the 58 teeth are as long as a human forearm!


Here's an ad for a TV show about this particular dino skeleton.

And “This Day in History” also has a video segment about the T-Rex named Sue, starting around halfway mark.

Play dino games!

There are several games on the American Museum of Natural History's "Ology" website.

There's lots to do on the PBS Kids website.




February 12, 2011


Darwin Day and Lincoln's Birthday

For more on these two important birthdays, see last year's post

Charles Darwin and Abraham Lincoln aren't the only folks of note born on February 12. Some other birthdays include:

Christina Ricci – 1980 – actress
Judy Blume – 1938 – author
Bill Russell – 1934 – basketball legend
Anna Pavlova – 1881 – ballerina
Barnum Brown – 1873 – paleontologist

Happy Birthday, Barnum Brown!

Quick, think of a dinosaur species name!

Even more quickly, name a carnivorous dinosaur!

If you are like most people, you probably thought of Tyrannosaurus rex after one or both of those prompts. This giant, fierce-looking meat-eater is one of the most recognizable and iconic dinosaurs and is part of modern popular culture. But you probably didn't know the name of the guy who found the first T. rex skeletons...until now.

Born on this day in 1873, Barnum Brown was named after the circus promoter P.T. Barnum. He grew up to be a paleontologist—a scientist who collects and studies fossils. It was Brown who discovered the first two partial skeletons of Tyrannosaurus rex, although some teeth and fragments had been found earlier. (They were not enough of a specimen to be recognized and named as a separate species.)

At the time of his discoveries, Brown was the assistant curator of the American Museum of Natural History. He found the T. rex fossils in Wyoming (in 1900) and in Montana (in 1902). Tyrannosaurus rex lived all over the western portion of North America about 67 to 65.5 million years ago.

Brown collected many, many more fossils of dinosaurs and other creatures as well. He and his team used a flatboat to float down the Red Deer River in Canada in the middle 1910s, looking for promising-looking fossil sites. I find it funny that another group of fossil hunters, the Sternberg family, tried to outdo them by hunting for fossil sites on the same stretch of river in rivalry that was apparently friendly!




How do we know what T. rex ate?

Check out the Enchanted Learning website for a lesson on dinosaur diets. 

For more on dinosaurs, try Planet Dinosaur