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Carnegie Museum to Show Dinosaurs Being Taken Apart
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=1894&e=1&u=/ap/20050324/ap_on_sc/dismantling_dinosaurs
Museum to Show Dinosaurs Being Taken Apart
1 hour, 13 minutes ago
by MIKE CRISSEY, Associated Press Writer
PITTSBURGH - What could be better than seeing the first tyrannosaurus rex
ever discovered? Watching it being taken apart. Visitors to the Carnegie
Museum of Natural History, which has one of the oldest and largest dinosaur
collections in the nation, will be able to watch as the museum's collection
of fossilized dinosaur skeletons are taken apart before a renovation of the
museum's almost century-old Dinosaur Hall.
"People can come in and watch the disarticulation process and watch as they
are being reconstructed. We are combining the two things kids of any age
love: construction and dinosaurs," said Bill DeWalt, director of the museum.
The first dinosaur to come down will be the allosaurus. A large two-legged
predator like the T. rex, the allosaurus will be decapitated Monday. Four
other dinosaurs will also be taken down and more may be assembled over the
next two years as part of the renovation.
The $35 million renovation will triple the size of the museum's Dinosaur
Hall, which started with one skeleton ? the sauropod Diplodocus carnegii
(named for steel magnate Andrew Carnegie). After it's done, the museum will
have room to show off more of its dinosaurs in more dramatic and
scientifically accurate poses.
The dinosaurs are now in turn-of-the-century poses with their tails dragging
on the ground; the tyrannosaurus stands like a kangaroo or Godzilla.
The Pittsburgh museum is among the last major natural history museums to
update its dinosaur collection to reflect current scientific thought.
"Dinosaurs were always viewed as bulky, hulking looking animals, so nobody
was moving fast. If you look at the 1920s, they are old and slow and big,
hulking reptiles," said Judd Case, a paleontologist and dean at St. Mary's
College of California.
The Pittsburgh museum is among the last major natural history museums to
update its dinosaur collection to reflect current scientific thought.
"Dinosaurs were always viewed as bulky, hulking looking animals, so nobody
was moving fast. If you look at the 1920s, they are old and slow and big,
hulking reptiles," said Judd Case, a paleontologist and dean at St. Mary's
College of California.
Early paleontologists weren't concerned as much with figuring out what
dinosaurs looked like so much as where they could find the next one.
"It was like finding a new stamp to add to the collection. People were not
looking at them in terms of taxonomy," Case said.
In the 1970s, paleontologists and paleobiologists began to challenge widely
held views of how dinosaurs carried themselves and starting taking harder
looks at what the bones could tell them. Now, scientists believe few
dinosaurs dragged their tails on the ground; most likely held them aloft and
used them for balance.
There have been other changes too.
In movies and some museums, for example, sauropods often are shown using
their long necks to grab leaves from trees like giraffes. Recent computer
models showed the bones in their 40-foot-necks weren't built for moving
their tiny heads much above their shoulders. So, they more likely were
grazers.
The Carnegie Museum of Natural History is the third-largest repository of
dinosaur fossils in the world, after the American Museum of Natural History
in New York City and the Smithsonian Institution (news - web sites).
Discovery.com named it the sixth best place in the world to see dinosaurs,
and Forbes.com calls it home to one of the best dinosaur collections in the
United States.
The Dinosaur Hall now is home to 15 skeletons of dinosaurs, including some
by which all other skeletons are judged ? the diplodocus (found in 1899 and
now the museum's mascot, nicknamed "Dippy"), the Apatosaurus louisae
(formerly known as the Brontosaurus and named for Carnegie's wife when it
was found in 1909) and the T. rex (the first one found in 1902 and bought
from the American Museum of Natural History in 1941).
Casts of the diplodocus skeleton were sent to 12 museums worldwide,
including the British Museum.
DeWalt, the Carnegie Museum director, said the museum had long wanted to
remount the Carnegie's dinosaurs to reflect the new science but didn't have
the space.
"The good thing about having the tails down is you have more floor space.
... If you are going to remount them you want them in a better space instead
of just having them crammed in like marching soldiers," DeWalt said.
On the Web:
Carnegie Museum of Natural History: http://www.carnegiemnh.org
Allan Edels