Dinosaurs: Preview The Reader
Dinosaurs: Preview The Reader
Dinosaurs: Preview The Reader
Dinosaurs
DINOSAURS
big
as
h
TI M V I CA RY
Tim Vicary
Think
mouth
are
of us
ese
an’t
3 3 3
4 BOOKWORMS
4 BOOKWORMS
EADING
4
05/01/2012 09:13
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Dinosaurs
We learn more all the time, but there are still more
questions to ask. What colour were the dinosaurs?
Which was the biggest of all? How fast could they move?
and today we have dinosaur books, films, and computer
games – what will we think of next? scientists,
businessmen, fossil hunters, kings, children – all kinds
of people are interested in dinosaurs. Will that ever end?
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ox fo r d b ook wor m s l i b r a ry
Factfiles
Dinosaurs
stage 3 (1000 headwords)
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T i m V i C a ry
Dinosaurs
100%
75%
ox f o r d u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s
70%
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1
Great Clarendon Street, Oxford, ox2 6dp, United Kingdom
Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford.
It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship,
and education by publishing worldwide. Oxford is a registered trade
mark of Oxford University Press in the UK and in certain other countries
This simplified edition © Oxford University Press 2012
The moral rights of the author have been asserted
First published 2012
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Links to third party websites are provided by Oxford in good faith and
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contained in any third party website referenced in this work
isbn: 978 0 19 479446 6
A complete recording of Dinosaurs is available
Printed in China
Word count (main text): 10,021
For more information on the Oxford Bookworms Library,
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acknowledgements
Cover image: Getty Images (Skull of Tyrannosaurus Rex/Antonio M. Rosario/Iconica)
Illustrations by: Peter Bull pp.12, 15, 20 (allosaurs and apatosaurus), 38 (maiasaur), Richard
Ponsford p.8/9 (timeline), and size comparisons pp.20, 24, 26, 27, 31, 33, 34, 36, 38, 39
The publishers would like to thank the following for permission to reproduce images: Alamy Images
pp.3 (William Buckland/The Print Collector), 6 (Dinner given by Waterhouse Hawkins/World
History Archive), 19 (Mamenchisaurus dinosaur skeleton/Kim Karpeles), 22 (Pterodactyl flying
dinosaurs/Corey Ford), 27 (Tyrannosaurus Rex/Eye Risk), 32 (Stegosaurus/Stock Illustrations
Ltd); Ardea pp.2 (Ictrhyosaur fossil/Pat Morris), 34 (Parasaurolophus fossil/Francois Gohier);
Corbis pp.0 (Juvenile Dromaeosaur fossil/Mike Segar/Reuters), 7 (Edward Cope/Louie Psihoyos/
Science Faction), 13 (Fossil of Coelophysis/Louie Psihoyos), 24 (Deinonychus sculpture and
skeletons/Louie Psihoyos/Science Faction), 29 (Fossil of Velociraptor attack/Louie Psihoyos),
31 (Triceratops skeleton/Louie Psihoyos), 35 (Rory Chapman/Bettmann), 36 (Fossil of Oviraptor
and eggs/Louie Psihoyos), 41 (Mononykus and Chicken/Louie Psihoyos), 47 (Vintage sketch
of an Iguanodon/Louie Psihoyos/Science Faction), 48 (Dinosaur footprints/Louie Psihoyos),
49 (Bob Bakker/Louie Psihoyos/Science Faction), 52 (Andrew Carnigie/Bettmann); DK Images
p.47 (Iguanodon Teeth/Colin Keates (c) Dorling Kindersley, Courtesy of the Natural History
Museum, London); Getty Images pp.11 (Earth illustrations/Dorling Kindersley), 54 (Girl looking
at dinosaur skeleton/Ron Levine); Kobal Collection p.53 (Jurassic Park/Amblin/Universal); Science
Photo Library pp.2 (Plesiosaur attack/Roger Harris), 3 (Mary Anning), 4 (Gideon Mantell/Paul D
Stewart), 5 (Richard Owen/Royal Institution of Great Britain), 7 (Othniel Charles Marsh/Library
of Congress), 16 (Natural History Museum’s Diplodocus/Natural History Museum, London),
26 (Spinosaurus dinosaur/Walter Myers), 33 (Ankylosaur/Roger Harris), 39 (Archaeopteryx fossil/
Jim Amos), 42 (K/T boundary layer of clay and iridium/Prof. Walter Alvarez), 43 (Tyrannosaurus
Rex fleeing from an asteroid strike/D. Van Ravenswaay), 46 (Palaeontological excavation/Pascal
Goetgheluck), 52 (Natural History Museum’s Diplodocus, 1905/Natural History Museum)
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C onT E nTs
i nTro Du CTio n i
1 Finding fossils 1
2 Dinosaur numbers 8
3 The first dinosaurs 10
4 Bigger and stronger 16
5 Big, bad, and dangerous 23
6 strangest of all 30
7 Family life 35
8 Birds 39
9 a sudden end 42
10 studying dinosaurs 46
11 Dinosaurs today 51
gLossary 55
inDEX 57
aC T iV iT iEs: Before reading 60
aC T iV iT iEs: While reading 61
aC T iV iT iEs: after reading 65
a Bou T T H E auTH o r 68
a Bou T T H E Bo o KWo rms LiBrary 69
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1 Finding fossils
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2 Dinosaurs
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Finding fossils 3
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4 Dinosaurs
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Finding fossils 5
Richard Owen
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6 Dinosaurs
owen was not a very nice man, but he was a great teacher.
He wanted everyone to know about the dinosaurs, so he
had some models of dinosaurs made for a park in Crystal
Palace, in London. The models were as big as real dinosaurs,
and you can still see them there today. on 1 January 1853,
owen held a dinner party for twenty-one scientists, inside
the model of the iguanodon. But Dr mantell was not there.
He had died the year before.
scientists all over the world read owen’s book. some of
the scientists inside the iguanodon came from germany and
Belgium. They found dinosaurs in their countries too. and
in the 1870s, two americans, othniel C. marsh and Edward
Drinker Cope, began to find dinosaurs in north america –
lots and lots of them.
it was an exciting time in the american West, but it
was a difficult, dangerous place to work. There was a lot
of fighting everywhere, and the scientists carried guns to
defend themselves. But people were building railways, and
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Finding fossils 7
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