Museums are filled with fake dinosaur fossils. See what it takes to make those r
| Vivacious Casino Striped Hyena | 12/08/25 | | Vivacious Casino Striped Hyena | 12/08/25 | | Vivacious Casino Striped Hyena | 12/08/25 | | Metal Cracking Round Eye Center | 12/08/25 | | Vivacious Casino Striped Hyena | 12/08/25 | | Vivacious Casino Striped Hyena | 12/08/25 | | Vivacious Casino Striped Hyena | 12/08/25 | | Vivacious Casino Striped Hyena | 12/08/25 | | Vivacious Casino Striped Hyena | 12/08/25 |
Poast new message in this thread
 |
Date: December 8th, 2025 6:07 PM Author: Vivacious Casino Striped Hyena
The Field Museum, Australia’s Museums Victoria, and England’s Oxford University Museum of Natural History all try to get ahead of the “Is it real?” question on their websites. In 2018, London’s Natural History Museum sent its iconic cast of Diplodocus, “Dippy,” on tour, leading some commenters to surmise with shock that the renowned dinosaur had always been a fraud. “Let’s face it,” one Huffington Post commenter sneered, “Dippy isn’t even a dinosaur. She’s a fake.” And it’s not just Dippy—another take from a paleontology educator on reconstructed dinosaurs conceded that “even the best fossil casts are going to lack a certain something that the original fossils have,” though the article failed to dig into what that je ne sais quoi might be. Kids seem to be especially hung up on whether a bone was once part of a real animal or not. In a 2018 study in the International Journal of Science Education, Part B, one child told surveyors that dinosaur casts were “not as special” as original fossils “’cause, eh, you just know that it’s…a piece of plastic or something.’”
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5808058&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=5310864#49494905) |
|
|