The Children’s Museum’s ‘Dinosaurs in Your Backyard’ ongoing exhibit examines species that once roamed Connecticut millions of years ago. On a recent Saturday morning, when temperatures were more in ...
Author Taran Collis will talk about her book ‘Dinosaurs Have Big Feelings Too’ at Chaucer’s Books. (Courtesy photo) Chaucer’s Books will host local kid’s book author Taran Collis for a reading and ...
This updated article won a silver medal in the Society of American Travel Writers 2024 Western Chapter Writing Awards. If you’ve got kids, chances are reasonably good you’ve got at least one dinosaur ...
Okay, tell me if this sounds familiar. You’ve got a kid who is obsessed with dinosaurs. I’m talking dino toys, clothes, maybe some stuffed animals and blankets, too—and it’s an easy sell to get them ...
Dinosaurs have always held a special place in the imagination of children and adults across the globe. From their majestic sizes to their mysterious extinction, these ancient creatures have enchanted ...
Once upon a time, a roaring red dinosaur bubble blower was delivered to a little girl in Texas by the Easter Bunny. She named him “Bob,” forgave him for only blowing bubbles about 12 percent of the ...
No parent would like to see their child’s head in the jaws of a dinosaur — unless, of course, it’s to take a fun photo with a T-Rex at the new dinosaur exhibit at the Long Island Children’s Museum in ...
Dinosaur enthusiasts residing in Colorado have plenty of reasons to be proud of their home state. Tyrannosaurus, Stegosaurus, Triceratops, Allosaurus, and Diplodocus remains all have been unearthed in ...
Stepping inside “Dinoman” Steve Springer’s yard feels like taking a step back in time. Springer has spent the last 18 years transforming his Henderson home into the Shan-Gri-La Prehistoric Park, also ...
Paleontologists say parents should nurture children’s romance with playing with dinosaurs, for “Paleontology is the gateway to science.” By Nicholas St. Fleur Every time Cheri Johnson, a senior ...
Listen, we get it. More than a year of pandemic isolation has warped everyone's sense of temporal perspective — in other words, time's gone all wibbly wobbly for a lot of us. Here's a potentially ...