Tyler Lyson
Tyler Lyson is the teen who discovered a mummified dinosour that has shocked the amazed the scientific community. He originally discovered the dinosaur remains in 1990 in North Dakota. The dinosaur has recently been excavated by top... [more]
Tyler Lyson is the teen who discovered a mummified dinosour that has shocked the amazed the scientific community. He originally discovered the dinosaur remains in 1990 in North Dakota. The dinosaur has recently been excavated by top tier scientific staff.
A Look at a Dinosaur Mummy

Scientists Get Rare Glimpse of Life 65 Million Years Ago By NED POTTER Dec. 4, 2007
The world of 65 million years ago is filled with mystery, especially because scientists have little to go on but bones.
But buried in a remote corner of North Dakota was a remarkably well-preserved dinosaur with fossilized skin, ligaments and tendons. You can even see scales on its side. The specimen turned out to be a duck-billed plant eater called a hadrosaur.
Tyler Lyson, the young scientist who found the fossil, said, "The skin hadn't collapsed in around the bone, and at that point I knew that we had a 3-D dinosaur mummy. I was absolutely thrilled."
Lyson is currently pursuing his doctorate in paleontology at Yale University and founded the Marmarth Research Foundation, an organization dedicated to the excavation, preservation and study of dinosaurs. Why is it important to find one so complete? Because bones don't tell you what the animal really looked like. Imagine if you found elephant bones, but you'd never seen a living one.
Matt Lamanna of Pittsburgh's Carnegie Museum of Natural History said, "There's no skeletal indication, or at least very little skeletal indication of one of the most characteristic features of an elephant, the long trunk." The hadrosaur has now been analyzed by a giant CT scanner, which showed it had surprisingly large hindquarters. That means that it was probably very fast -- even able to outrun the notorious Tyrannosaurus rex.
Patterns in those scales also suggest the hadrosaur had stripes along its tail -- perhaps to blend with the foliage.
Phil Manning, the chief researcher of this project at the University of Manchester said, "This possibly indicates that we had almost a striped camouflage pattern on some parts of our animal, which is very exciting."
The scientists nicknamed their friend "Dakota." Lyson said it's yielding ancient secrets.
Related Articles
Comments
Hello, we are an elemenatry school student (school for children with special needs) and his speech therapist from Holland. Niels and Marjanke.
Together we are working on a project about Dinosaurs and Niels would be thrilled if he could ask mister Tyler Lyson a few personal questions about the discovery of the dinosaur in North Dakota.
Would it be possible to communicate via my work mail (or gmail) on this matter. It would be very special!!!!
Yours Truly,
Marjanke Ruys - Zonnenberg
mru@rrc.nl or mruyszonnenberg@gmail.com
Together we are working on a project about Dinosaurs and Niels would be thrilled if he could ask mister Tyler Lyson a few personal questions about the discovery of the dinosaur in North Dakota.
Would it be possible to communicate via my work mail (or gmail) on this matter. It would be very special!!!!
Yours Truly,
Marjanke Ruys - Zonnenberg
mru@rrc.nl or mruyszonnenberg@gmail.com
About the Author
People in Pictures
Top Science Articles
|
Cern - Reaserch Center Exclusive
Cool pictures from inside CERN in Switzerland.
|
|
|
Is the Polar Bears’ Predicament a Sign of Things to Come?
What landed the mighty polar bear on the "threatened" Endangered Species list?
|
|
|
Body Worlds Exhibit
Since its debut in Tokyo in 1996, this show has sparked controversy and curiosity.
|
Popular Science Zines


















