University of Chicago Laboratory Schools
Chicago, Illinois
Susan Lesher 5th Grade
Visit
the Class' Web Site

About The Class:
Our school is on the
campus of The University of Chicago,
so Professor Sereno and Project Exploration
are neighbors. We are looking forward
to the arrival of the bones which
will be prepared only a few blocks
from our classroom. Our class is made
up of 12 boys and 11 girls. This is
a bright, lively group of children.
They love reading books of all kinds
and are wonderful, creative writers.
The children have many special talents
and interests including: participating
in team sports and activities such
as soccer, baseball, and swimming,
ice skating, gymnastics, blading,
biking, horseback riding, building
models, drawing, and playing a variety
of musical instruments.
The class started its study of Dinosaur
Expedition 2003 with a piece of historical
fiction, My Daniel, by Pam Conrad.
This is a story of a dinosaur found
on the farm of a Nebraska family in
the late 1800's. After reading this
book, the children became enthralled
with dinosaur prospectors. We've continued
by studying Professor Sereno's 1993
and 1997 expeditions to Niger through
videos as well as written material.
It is exciting to be able to follow
the 2003 expedition on the Project
Exploration web site. We also intend
to write letters to the team in the
field.
The focus of study has been on the
planning and preparation for expeditions,
the grueling work in the field, and
the preparation of bones in the lab.
We will also study the cultural and
geographical significance of the sites.
The children will be doing research
and working in teams to write reports
about the countries that surround
Niger. They will also study some of
the famous palentologists and dinosaur
prospectors who have preceded Professor
Sereno.
Student Questions:
- Why did the modern crocodile
get smaller than SuperCroc? Why
did the species get smaller?
SERENO: The evolutionary tree of
crocodiles has many branches, and
SuperCroc is located along one branch
that specialized in becoming so
huge it could eat dinosaurs. Modern
crocs were just evolving then from
another branch that, like most crocs,
were more moderate in size. Some
modern crocs are the same size as
their Cretaceous cousins (like a
caiman), but others are larger,
like a saltie or an American croc.
So, you see, they haven’t
gotten smaller over time. Some modern
crocs have evolved to larger sizes,
although still smaller than SuperCroc.
- Most members of the team
have never gone an an expedition
like this before. How were expedition
team members chosen? What experiences
and qualities were important in
making the decision.
GRAY: All of the members
on this team had either worked with
Dr. Sereno in the past, or with
a trusted colleague. First and foremost,
we assemble people who can get work
together and respect each other
for long periods of time in the
middle of nowhere. Beyond that,
one has to be able and motivated
to work hard, long hours under tough
conditions, seven days a week. I’m
talking about people who jump in
and get things done and love doing
it.
- Why are dinosaurs often
posed to look as though they are
going to attack? Are they posed
as they are found or as you believe
their behavior would dictate?
SERENO: They are posed
to give some indication of a characteristic
behavior -- like attacking if it
is a meat-eater. Of course, most
of the time, the dinosaur was probably
sleeping under a tree, but that
wouldn’t look very interesting.
And they are never found in a life-like
pose. After all, they were dead
when buried, and sometimes their
bones got shifted all over the place.
- When you find a new dinosaur
how do you decide on the name?
SERENO: A scientific name
is permanent and must be used by
everyone, so it better be good.
By “good,” I mean that
it preferably has meaning or significance
related to the dinosaur and that
it can be pronounced relatively
easily. It should have a nice “ring”
to it! By tradition, we often use
stems in Latin or Greek or a native
language in the area of the find.
When there is not an outstanding
feature of the dinosaur, like a
horn or crest, then a place name
or local name might be used. Eoraptor
is the oldest dinosaur, and so I
named it the “dawn raptor.”
Afrovenator was the first
predatory dinosaur from the Cretaceous
of Africa, so we called it “African
hunter.”
- Parent Question:
How can you tell if the bones belong
to a male or female?
SERENO: The simple answer -- no
one can. Don’t believe the
hype about Sue in some corners.
Ever try to sex a living reptile?
Believe me, it ain’t easy,
and none of the parts are hard or
leave any mark on a skeleton. Worse
yet, dinosaurs don’t seem
to have any obvious hard-part sex
differences, like horns. They all
look pretty much the same. When
we have found a 50-50 split in a
bunch of skeletons, with some looking
one way and some looking slightly
different, we don’t know which
is which.
View
the class birthday cards to Paul Sereno
|