Photo: #The Stegosaurus, of the late Jurassic period, is known for its charactaristic tail spikes and bony plates on its back. It was the size of a school bus. The plates may have been armor, or they may have helped regulate body temperature. Blood ran through the plates, and here they are depicted in a flaring red when threatened by the Allosaurus.
Photo: #The Allosaurus was a bipedal predator of the late Jurassic period. Here a Barchiosaurus protects her child from the Allosaurus, a swift hunter, during the Walking with Dinosaurs show at the Xcel Energy Center in Saint Paul.
Photo: #Here the meat-eating Lilliansternus from the late Triassic period makes off with a just-hatched newborn dinosaur.
Photo: #One of the largest dinosaurs known, the Brachiosaurus is a sauropod from the late Jurassic period. They could be as long as 75 feet, and could raise their heads a few stories in the air.
Photo: #The Tyrannosaurus Rex is one of the most famous and ferocious dinosaurs. It had tiny forelimbs was one of the largest carnivores to roam the earth. A mother and baby "T. rex" make up the finale to the Walking with Dinosaurs show. They provide both the most frightening and as well as tenderest moments on stage.
Photo: #The Torosaurus weighed about five tons. Its name means "perforated lizard." It was an herbivore with a distinctive profile. It had a large bony plated skull and horns.

Walking with dinosaurs

by Tom Crann, Minnesota Public Radio
June 13, 2008

St. Paul, Minn. — Dinosaurs hold a fascination on our culture, even 250 million years after they roamed the earth. How else can you explain the success of everything from the Flinstones to Jurassic Park to the BBC TV show, Walking with Dinosaurs?

Now there's a new touring show based on that series that brings the large lizards to life in a new way.

Walking with Dinosaurs has been traveling around to arenas that are large enough to hold the Braciosaurus, T.Rex and their fellow gigantic extinct creatures. The exhibit is now on display at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul.

MPR's Tom Crann visited the dinosaur show with paleontologist Kristi Curry Rogers, an assistant professor of paleontology at Macalester College who specializes in long-necked dinosaurs.

Rogers has some thoughts about the fascination we all have with dinosaurs, at any age.

"Part of it is that dinosaurs, at least for kids, are monsters. They really are real monsters, but they're extinct so they can't really do any damage to us. They don't really live with us anymore," said Rogers. "But I also think it's the fact that in museums and on television you see the bones of dinosaurs, and that leaves a lot of room for your imagination to put the skin and muscle and behaviors back onto those dinosaurs."

"Dinosaur science is one of those rare scientific disciplines in which you can really use your imagination to try to understand things," Rogers continued. "And there's a lot of room for creativity for that science, because there's a lot we just can't know."

Rogers was excited about the prospect of seeing the stage show, both the scientific and imaginative aspects. It's hosted by an actor who portrays a paleontologist, complete with Indiana Jones vest.

He served as the tour guide for Tom Crann and Kristi Curry Rogers.

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