As they rounded a bend, a smaller river joined theirs from the right. The swirling currents spun them around in circles. Morgan held his hands overhead like a kid on a roller coaster. Beyond the junction, the river slowed again and William used the shovel to straighten them out.
Dizzy from the spinning, Al turned to face forward once more, just missing a swarm of bubbles that surfaced behind the raft.
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This is "Stan" from the Black Hills Institute in Hill City, South Dakota. Stan was found with a (healed) hole in the back of his skull the same size as a tyrannosaur tooth. Perhaps he was attacked by the tyrannosaur that visited the bend in the river in The Dinosaur Four. The Everything Dinosaur Blog has published an article encouraging adults to read more, and they suggest The Dinosaur Four as a great starting point.
It seems that adult literacy levels are a concern in some parts in the world and a great way to get back into reading is to read about things that fascinate and intrigue. A novel about time travel and prehistoric animals ticks all the boxes as far as these dinosaur experts are concerned. Check out the blog article here: Fiction for Older Dinosaur Fans Everything Dinosaur specialises in the supply of dinosaur themed merchandise including hundreds of different types of prehistoric animal models. Please visit Everything Dinosaur to find all sorts of fantastic dinosaur merchandise. Researchers at McGill university have found fossilized evidence of a Cretaceous forest fire.
It sounds a lot like the triceratops hillside from The Dinosaur Four! Read more over at Science Daily. Scott Hartman posted a killer pick of a Deinonychus on his Twitter page.
Click the picture above to see the whole thing. For more great dinosaur art, check out Scott's Twitter page and his Skeletal Drawing site. Spoiler alert: A pack of Deinonychus show up in THE DINOSAUR FOUR. It takes a hefty weapon to fend them off. THE DINOSAUR FOUR is now available for purchase at Amazon.
I hope you enjoy it and would love to hear your feedback. In 2012, James Cameron revealed that he tried to buy the rights to Jurassic Park, but that Steven Spielberg beat him to it by a few hours. "But when I saw the film, I realised that I was not the right person to make the film, he was. Because he made a dinosaur movie for kids, and mine would have been Aliens with dinosaurs, and that wouldn't have been fair. Cameron is being gracious. There's plenty of room for an darker, more adult dinosaur thriller.
Read the full story at the Huffington Post |
AuthorGeoff Jones is the author of the sci-fi thriller Archives
April 2020
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