Here’s what came out this week in dinosaur news:
- Kenneth Lacovara, the paleontologist who discovered Dreadnoughtus, gives a TED talk about how the past gives us perspective and humility
- Baby sauropods were resilient and grew quickly, according to USA Today, Discover, Science Mag, and Science
- A new paper studied the end of the Cretaceous and found that volcanoes probably didn’t kill the non-avian dinosaurs, according to Phys.org and The Royal Society Publishing
- Inverse shares a list of five places you can go to dig for dinosaurs
- Geekologie wrote about dinosaur shaped lamps, available from Firebox
- Into Film created a PDF full of activities related to The Good Dinosaur
- A fire damaged Delhi’s National Museum of Natural History, according to Reuters
- The Cleveland Museum of Natural History got its Stegosaurus, Steggie, back greeting visitors at the entrance, according to FOX8
- In Australia at the Workshops Rail Museum, part of the Queensland Museum, visitors could see dinosaurs getting repairs, according to QT
- Five people in Texas were charged with stealing dinosaur fossils from Utah, according to Desert News
- In British Columbia, paleontologists are angry because campers lit a fire very near dinosaur tracks, which could ruin the site, according to CBC
- Tilting Point and Pokoko Studio released a new game called Dino Bash, according to Touch Arcade
- There are more Jurassic World 2 rumors, about dinosaurs possibly being the alpha species in the world, according to Gospel Herald
- Britain’s Got Talent recently featured a dancing dinosaur, according to RadioTimes