I was very fortunate, during my early years as a paleontologist, in that my field crews and I made some remarkable discoveries indicating dinosaurs to have been extremely social.
Give a talk to children and tell them dinosaurs didn't drag their tails, and you get arguments.
Almost all of my graduate students say that they got interested in dinosaurs because of 'Jurassic Park.'
Children have a great urge to learn about dinosaurs.
Dinosaurs replace their teeth throughout their life. And T. rex replaced all of their teeth every year.
I found my first dinosaur bone when I was 6, growing up in Montana. Ever since then I've been interested in dinosaurs.
I'm trying to figure out the biology of dinosaurs and what they were like as living creatures.
Unfortunately, with dinosaurs, we haven't had enough specimens to determine how much variation there is within a species.
Dinosaurs are built just like birds - they can squat down, they can get up. Mammals, when we lay down, we throw our legs out to the sides - birds cannot do that. Dinosaurs could not do that either.
Most people looking for dinosaurs are looking for beautiful skeletons.
Keratin can be very colorful, as we see in birds. We'd expect dinosaurs to be very colorful because they basically invented the characteristics we see in birds.