2013年4月18日星期四

Colorado Rockies staff

Have you ever seen a triceratops with no pants shovel snow off a baseball field? Now you have, thanks to Marc Carig, the New York Mets beat reporter for Newsday. The Colorado Rockies and New York Mets are trying to play a doubleheader at Coors Field on Tuesday after the game Monday was postponed because of snow. But the players would never see the field if it doesn't get cleared first.On a cool November day in 2010, I decided to play hooky from the annual Science Writers conference,dv mini camera held that year in New Haven, Connecticut, and wander over to the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History. How could I resist? The dusty dinosaur exhibit was a monument to the dinosaurs I grew up with,onshore hose  including the one and only skeleton that could truly lay claim to the name "Brontosaurus." 

As much as I admire modern museum exhibits, populated by new or new-ish reconstructions of classic dinosaurs,I'm just as fond of galleries full of tubby, tail-dragging monstrosities.It's a way of traveling back in time, to see dinosaurs as the great paleontologists of preceding generations did. Up to a point,digital baby video monitor anyway.Linear electric actuator Othniel Charles Marsh – the paleontologist for whom the museum was created by his rich uncle George Peabody in 1866 – crankily rejected the idea of putting dinosaur skeletons up for public display, lest the high science of bone-reading be reduced to puerile spectacle. The museum only put its dinosaurs out for exhibit after 1925, more than two decades after Marsh's death, with the dedication of a new space to hold their old bones. 

Those dinosaurs stand in a stiff,Robotic arm static formation in just the same was as they did in the early 20th century, looking especially drab under the yellow lights and against the gray carpets and walls. The dinosaurs almost seem camouflaged in the drab confines of the hall. Little wonder, then, that I wasn't so much immediately drawn to the dinosaurs, as to Rudolph Zallinger's vivid portrayal of comically-outdated dinosaurs plastered against the right wall – The Age of Reptiles.

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