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Sara Levine - Fossil by Fossil: Comparing Dinosaur Bones

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Sara Levine Fossil by Fossil: Comparing Dinosaur Bones
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Fossil by Fossil: Comparing Dinosaur Bones: summary, description and annotation

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Audisee eBooks with Audio combine professional narration and sentence highlighting for an engaging read aloud experience!
An innovative look at animal eyes from the creators of Bone by Bone, Tooth by Tooth, and Eye by Eye.
What dinosaur would you be if you had a bony ridge rising from the back of your skull and three horns poking up from the front?
Answer: a triceratops!
This picture book will keep you guessing as you find out how human skeletons are like-and unlike-those of dinosaurs!
Another humerus study in comparative anatomy.-Kirkus Reviews
In this companion to Bone by Bone (2013) and Tooth by Tooth (2016), young children from diverse cultures walk through a museum and notice how dinosaurs had some of the same bones (now fossils) as humans do today. The real fun, however, comes from the dinosaurs extra bones. With some of these extra bones attached to them, the children imagine, for instance, What if you had a bony ridge that rose up from the back of your skull and three horns poking up from the front? Turning the page reveals theyd be a triceratops. Digitally enhanced acrylic artwork shows the full skeleton, while a brief description provides basic facts about the dinosaur. The long-necked, long-tailed diplodocus adds a dash of drama, requiring dual gatefolds to contain its length. In addition to the land-dwelling dinosaurs, flying and dolphin-like dinos are included. The book concludes with birds and a short discussion of this type of living dinosaur. A plethora of back matter, including dinosaur groups and a pronunciation guide, completes this engaging dino collection.-Booklist
A comparison of select human and dinosaur bones connects readers with some of our more ancient predecessors. Continuing the approach of Bone by Bone (2013) and Tooth by Tooth (2016), Levine points up parallels between fossilized skulls, ribs, toes, and other skeletal features and those of modern readers as well as prehistoric frills, horns, and the like that we dont happen to sport. Some of this she presents as easy posers: what sort of dino would you be if you both had a long neck and your vertebrae didnt stop at your rear end but kept going and going and going? Diplodocus, perhaps, or, she properly notes on the ensuing double gatefold, another type of sauropod. What if you had two finger bones per hand rather than five? T. Rex! If your pinky bone grew tremendously long? A pterosaur! Just for fun, in the simple but anatomically careful illustrations, Spookytooth temporarily alters members of a cast of, mostly, brown-skinned young museumgoers (two wearing hijabs) to reflect the exaggerated lengths, sizes, or other adaptations certain bones underwent in dinosaurs and several other types of extinct reptiles. Generous lists of websites and other information sources follow a revelation (that wont come as a surprise to confirmed dino fans) that birds are dinosaurs too. Another humerus study in comparative anatomy.-Kirkus Reviews

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GFYPalmer-Regular KingGeorgeBoldClean KingGeorgeLightClean LernerLogo - photo 1
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COMPARING DINOSAUR BONES SARA LEVINE ILLUSTRATED BY TS SPOOKYTOOTH - photo 2
COMPARING
DINOSAUR
BONES
SARA LEVINE
ILLUSTRATED BY
T.S SPOOKYTOOTH
Millbrook Press Minneapolis
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For Benjamin S L For Oliver TS S Text copyright 2018 by Sara Levine - photo 3
For Benjamin
S. L.
For Oliver
T.S S.
Text copyright 2018 by Sara Levine
Illustrations copyright 2018 by T.S Spookytooth
All rights reserved. International copyright secured. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or
transmitted in any form or by any meanselectronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwisewithout the prior written
permission of Lerner Publishing Group, Inc., except for the inclusion of brief quotations in an acknowledged review.
Millbrook Press
A division of Lerner Publishing Group, Inc.
241 First Avenue North
Minneapolis, MN 55401 USA
For reading levels and more information, look up this title at www.lernerbooks.com.
Designed by Danielle Carnito.
Main body text set in GFY Palmer. Typeface provided by 29/28.
The illustrations in this book were created with acrylic paints and a little computer trickery.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Levine, Sara. | Spookytooth, T. S., illustrator.
Title: Fossil by fossil : comparing dinosaur bones / Sara Levine ; illustrated by T.S Spookytooth.
Description: Minneapolis : Millbrook Press, [2017] | Audience: Age 410. | Audience: K to grade 3. | Includes bibliographical
references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2017010028 (print) | LCCN 2017012747 (ebook) | ISBN 9781512498615 (eb pdf) | ISBN 9781467794893 (lb : alk. paper)
Subjects: LCSH: DinosaursJuvenile literature. | FossilsJuvenile literature.
Classification: LCC QE861.5 (ebook) | LCC QE861.5 .L49488 2017 (print) | DDC 567.9dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017010028
Manufactured in the United States of America
1-38651-20543-9/15/2017
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Can you imagine what youd look like if you were a dinosaur You might be - photo 4
Can you imagine
what youd look
like if you were
a dinosaur?
You might be pretty funny looking.
Or even quite scary.
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On the outside people and dinosaurs look very very different - photo 5
On the outside, people and dinosaurs look very, very different.
Parasaurolophus
skull
vertebrae
ribs
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But on the inside were actually very similar In fact the bones that make up - photo 6
But on the inside, were actually very similar. In fact, the bones that
make up our skeletons are mostly the same. How can we know this?
Dinosaurs are all dead, right? Lucky for us, some of their bones
have lasted as fossilsbones that have turned to stone over time.
Dinosaurs and people
all have skulls and
vertebrae and ribs...
skull
vertebrae
ribs
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scapula humerus ulna radius metacarpals phalanges GFYPalmer-Regular - photo 7
scapula
humerus
ulna
radius
metacarpals
phalanges
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and we all have shoulder bones and arm bones and finger bones scapula - photo 8
and we all have shoulder bones and arm bones and finger bones...
scapula
humerus
ulna
radius
carpals
metacarpals
phalanges
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ilium pubis ischium femur tibia fibula tarsals metatarsals - photo 9
ilium
pubis
ischium
femur
tibia
fibula
tarsals
metatarsals
phalanges
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and we all have hip bones and leg bones and toe bones ilium pubis - photo 10
and we all have hip
bones and leg bones
and toe bones.
ilium
pubis
ischium
femur
tibia
fibula
tarsals
metatarsals
phalanges
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But some dinosaurs had some extra bones in their bodies that made them - photo 11
But some dinosaurs had some extra bones in
their bodies that made them different from us.
Can you imagine what you might look like
if we added some bones to your body?
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