T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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124.1 | | ODIXIE::CIAROCHI | One Less Dog | Wed Nov 30 1994 22:35 | 3 |
| Hey! An experiment!
Is this science?
|
124.2 | Anyone Got Any Amber? | PEKING::DP_SECURITY | Is It Morning Yet? | Wed Nov 30 1994 23:26 | 75 |
| Question:
Michael Crichton's book Jurassic Park contains some mention of an
argument within the paleontological profession regarding the animal
group to which dinos belonged - were they birds or lizards? Was this
an argument dreamed up purely for the book or is it an actual dispute?
If it is an actual argument then one possible explanation for the base
note's query as to why the smaller species remained when the larger
ones died out would run as follows: First, dinos would have been a
type of bird (also mentioned in JP), not vice versa. They would have
been warm blooded and it is an established fact that birds have the
highest body temperature of any creature. They are, as a result, the
most likely to die if hit by unexpected air temperature drops.
Couple this with the gi-huge size of many of these creatures and sling
in an asteroid for good measure and there are sufficient factors for
the deaths of the largest animals while the smaller survived.
1. Asteroid smashes into Earth, throwing up massive amounts of dust,
probably starting major earthquakes with associated volcanic activity,
plus tsunamis and you have the equavilent of a nuclear winter. Our hot
blooded friends, the 90% not swallowed by fissures or drowned by 100ft
plus waves, begin to lose enormous amounts of body heat in rates
proportionate to their bulk. This kills perhaps one third of the 90%,
maybe more.
2. Most of the sun's light is blocked for decades by the dust in the
atmosphere. Large dinos are still dying of cold, those remaining are
competing for a reducing amount of food brought about by the decrease
in forest/grazing. The smaller, nimbler creatures are getting the best
of this bad deal as they are not losing as much body heat, plus their
greater mobility enables them to reach the best supply first.
3. As the larger herbivores become fewer, the larger carnivores have a
choice - go onto short rations (literally) or range wider in search of
prey. This would lead to increased competition in the latter case,
which would inevitably result in deaths, and in the former case deeper
inroads into the stocks of smaller herbivores.
4. In the meantime, the smallest carnivores would be subsisting on
carrion and each other and would likely be too quick on their feet for
their larger kin.
5. Eventually the available vegetation becomes too sparse to support
the larger herbivores and they serve their last useful purpose by
providing carrion for the small carnivores. The T Rex & co starve
slowly to death.
6. Meanwhile the dust etc has been settling, allowing more and more
sunlight to reach the surface which stimulates the grasses and dormant
scrub to begin growing. The dino population is a fraction of what it
was; the carrion has rotted away and the only way for the remaining
carnies to survive is to travel, perhaps great distances. It is still
bittlerly cold and evolution has been stimulated into extending the
scales into feathers. Legs have strengthened and lengthened and the
creatures exclusively use their hind legs for locomotion. First Emus?
Look at any creature which is going to rise to absolute superemacy in
the survival stakes: Bipedal locomotion and HEIGHT are vital, the
latter to see/reach further to locate your food source, the former to
handle that food when you reach it. The exceptions from the period are
alligators and sharks which have remained pretty much the same but look
at the original designs of them - not much room for improvement.
7. Feathers are extended scales - proven. The smaller birds (dinos)
being lighter and nimbler would perhaps have taken to the trees or
clifftops to escape predation by others. Getting up there's easy - ask
any 7 year old; getting down again bites if you get it wrong. Lose
your balance and the instinct is to throw your arms wide - birds were
probably no different. Primitive feather arrays acted as a combination
airfoil and parachute and lo! airborne eating machines. Sitting
in treetops was obviously safer than being down below and nuts and
berries grow in trees. A change of diet gradually takes place and, when
they're not eating they're watching these strange fish-like things
taking their first look at dry land.
The rest, as they say......
What do you think? Plausible?
Daz
|
124.3 | | ODIXIE::CIAROCHI | One Less Dog | Wed Nov 30 1994 23:42 | 2 |
| 'cept that it would happen over a period of years, as opposed to
millions of years.
|
124.4 | | BOXORN::HAYS | I think we are toast. Remember the jam? | Thu Dec 01 1994 07:47 | 18 |
| RE: 124.2 by PEKING::DP_SECURITY "Is It Morning Yet?"
> Michael Crichton's book Jurassic Park contains some mention of an
> argument within the paleontological profession regarding the animal
> group to which dinos belonged - were they birds or lizards? Was this
> an argument dreamed up purely for the book or is it an actual dispute?
It's pretty well settled: birds are dinosaurs. It was a hot discussion 15
or so years ago.
> What do you think? Plausible?
No. Early birds predate the end of the dinosaurs by 10's of millions of
years.
Phil
|
124.5 | Hmmm | POWDML::BUCKLEY | I [heart] Roller Coasters! | Thu Dec 01 1994 10:39 | 5 |
| >> It's pretty well settled: birds are dinosaurs.
RAPTOR - Velociraptor
- Bird of prey
|
124.6 | | SMURF::BINDER | vitam gustare | Thu Dec 01 1994 10:40 | 16 |
| .4
> It's pretty well settled: birds are dinosaurs.
in most experts' minds, it's pretty well settled. however, there are
still some anomalies to be explained; chief among them is the fact that
avian ear structure is far closer to crocodilian ear structure than to
dinosaurian - the difference is so striking, in fact, that recently one
prominent paleontologist has gone on record saying that birds could not
have evolved from primitive dinosaur stock because of this difference.
what IS settled, though, is that birds and dinosaurs are both now
classified as members of a taxonomic class called Archosauria, which is
divided into subclasses that include Reptilia, Dinosauria, and Aves;
previously, dinosaurs were classified in class Reptilia and birds were
in their own class Aves.
|
124.7 | velociraptor == fast thief | SMURF::BINDER | vitam gustare | Thu Dec 01 1994 10:43 | 11 |
| .5
> RAPTOR - Velociraptor
> - Bird of prey
no. a raptor is a thief, not a bird. eagles and hawks are called
raptors because they seize and carry off their prey. vide the dinosaur
called oviraptor, egg thief, because the first specimens were found in
nests of eggs and were presumed to have been feeding on the eggs. it is
now known that those eggs were in fact oviraptor eggs, and the adults
found there were mothers, not predators. but the name sticks.
|
124.8 | not all ancient reptiles were dinosaurs | CSSREG::BROWN | KB1MZ FN42 | Thu Dec 01 1994 12:43 | 12 |
| One of the shows about dinos on TLC (over turkey-day weekend)
theorized tha<t some of the larger, faster upright-standing dino's
may have been feathered. It is postulated that the faster running
predators like the V-raptors may have been warm-blooded, or at least
had some built in blood-warming mechanism. Seeing as how our
contemporary birds are warm-blooded, and reptiles are not, it is a good
possibility that dinos had this advantage.
One other point they made is that a true "dinosaur" had legs which were
not splayed from the body, as in today's smaller lizards and
alligators, they were more or less vertical from the hip.
|
124.9 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | too few args | Thu Dec 01 1994 12:50 | 4 |
|
oh boy, richard, a whole dinosaur topic to play in.
cool.
|
124.10 | another possible climate side effect | MIMS::WILBUR_D | | Thu Dec 01 1994 13:40 | 7 |
|
Another extinction theory is if Dinosaur sex in determined the
same way reptile sex..ei..by the temperature in the nest; too warm
or too cold could produce broods of a single sex.
|
124.11 | | GAVEL::JANDROW | Green Eyed Lady... | Thu Dec 01 1994 14:57 | 7 |
|
i hate barney.
but dino is cool...
|
124.12 | <-- {snicker} | POWDML::LAUER | Little Chamber of Perdition | Thu Dec 01 1994 15:04 | 1 |
|
|
124.13 | <-- {simper} | POLAR::RICHARDSON | The Quintessential Gruntling | Thu Dec 01 1994 15:05 | 2 |
|
|
124.14 | {<--- oh my } | GAVEL::JANDROW | Green Eyed Lady... | Thu Dec 01 1994 15:14 | 2 |
|
|
124.15 | {<-- This troubles me} | POLAR::RICHARDSON | The Quintessential Gruntling | Thu Dec 01 1994 15:15 | 1 |
|
|
124.16 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | The difference? About 8000 miles | Thu Dec 01 1994 15:20 | 12 |
| Re: <<< Note 124.8 by CSSREG::BROWN "KB1MZ FN42" >>>
>> It is postulated that the faster running
>> predators like the V-raptors may have been warm-blooded, or at least
>> had some built in blood-warming mechanism.
If it's the same show I saw a couple of months ago (did they caputre a sea
turtle?) I think the alternate warming system is called "Gigantathermy"
(spelling?) -- the waste heat of the animal keeps it warm, rather than any
dedicated warming "system".
Roak
|
124.17 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Thu Dec 01 1994 15:26 | 2 |
| Well, that's better than swallowing one of those chafing dish warmers,
I suppose.
|
124.18 | | ODIXIE::CIAROCHI | One Less Dog | Thu Dec 01 1994 16:58 | 6 |
| raptor = raven, as in "...rapt, rapt, rapting on my door?"
"quoth the raven, nevermore."
velociraptor = raven riding a fast bike.
Man, don't you guys know anything?
|
124.19 | | SMURF::BINDER | vitam gustare | Mon Dec 05 1994 13:09 | 17 |
| .16
> "Gigantathermy"
not in a velociraptor. they were about the size of a german shepherd
dog, roughly 150 pounds in weight.
warming by gigantothermy is postulated for the sauropods (apatosaurs,
brachiosaurs, et al.) but not for theropods (the predators). bone
studies show that theropod bones had structures much like those of
birds, with charcteristics associated with internal homeothermy. it is
possible, in fact some research shows it as quite likely, that the
bigger theropods, like T. rex, Albertosaurus, et al., may have begun
life with a system of warm-bloodedness like that of birds but, as they
grew to adulthood, changed from that system to a system of combined
gigantothermy and muscular homeothermy (in which activity provides the
energy and size maintains it).
|
124.20 | | SPEZKO::FRASER | Mobius Loop; see other side | Mon Dec 05 1994 14:39 | 8 |
| Dick, I seem to remember that "The Making of JP" had a segment
which explained that they (the JP folks) had invented the
velociraptor for the movie - the clear implication was that it
didn't exist or at least that no remains had ever been found to
suggest it's existance.
Andy
|
124.21 | | SMURF::BINDER | vitam gustare | Mon Dec 05 1994 15:03 | 17 |
| sorry, &y, they didn't invent the velociraptor. there is a recognized
genus Velociraptor. it's a member of the family Dromaeosauridae, which
also includes Deinonychus, a rather larger beast, and Utahraptor, one
that turns out to be about the size of the raptors in jurassic park.
the two known velociraptors are V. antirrhopus and v. mongoliensis,
both from asia.
the reason that the raptors in jp were so big was in order to fit a
human inside them. spielberg also excused his failure to adhere to
known fact by saying they'd be much scarier that size. as it happened,
the very first known specimen of Utahraptor was discovered during the
actual production of the film, thereby justifying the decision after
the fact.
but spielberg missed the boat on the scariness quotient, i'd be a hell
of a lot more scared of a critter that vicious and also small enough to
go everywhere i could go.
|
124.22 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Mon Dec 05 1994 15:07 | 10 |
| Since we're having some serious discussion here -
Any portrayals I've ever seen of triceratops always leave me with the distinct
impression that it was a "very different" sort of beast than most of the
other dinosaurs. In looking at the skelatal structure (as normally
postured) it has more of the appearance of our present day pachyderms
(rhinos, hippos, elephants, ?) than of any of its contemporaries.
Has there been any serious professional thought given to a relationship
or decendency to mammals for them?
|
124.23 | | SPEZKO::FRASER | Mobius Loop; see other side | Mon Dec 05 1994 15:13 | 9 |
| Oh, ok Dick - my interpretation could (easily) have been faulty
since I know little about them; I just had a recollection that
something had been invented and took it to be the vraptor
itself, rather than it's size for the movie.
Thanks!
a
|
124.24 | | SMURF::BINDER | vitam gustare | Mon Dec 05 1994 15:19 | 20 |
| .22
no.
ceratopsians were ornithischians, meaning that they had a hip structure
more like that of modern birds than like that of modern lizards. there
were many dinosaurs with a quite similar skeletal structure, such as
stegosaurs and ankylosaurs. in each case there are modifications, but
the main structure is pretty basic.
all of these animals were digitigrade, which happens to be true of the
pachyderms as well, but so were all the sauropods and, for that matter,
all other dinosaurs - a digitigrade stance is a characteristic of all
the dinosaurs.
the essential structure of the ceratopsian skull does not resemble the
skull of any mammal, pachyderm or other; all the dinosaurs were
diapsids, having two arches in the skull, whereas all mammals are
synapsids, having only one. also, pachyderms have no extended carapace
like that which identifies a ceratopsian.
|
124.25 | | SUBPAC::JJENSEN | Jojo the Fishing Widow | Mon Dec 05 1994 15:34 | 11 |
| &y,
Possibly you were thinking of the acid-spitting dilophosaurs in
Jurassic Park. I was reading a book with my son (over and over
and over and over...) about the movie, and it mentioned that
the neck frill, "hooting", and acid were for entertainment
value, not based in scientific discovery.
joanne
|
124.26 | | SMURF::BINDER | vitam gustare | Mon Dec 05 1994 15:36 | 3 |
| and they made the dilophousurus only about 1/3 of the size of the real
ones, thinking to play it for cute value and then shock the audience
with the discovery that cute isn't always nice.
|
124.27 | | SPEZKO::FRASER | Mobius Loop; see other side | Mon Dec 05 1994 16:07 | 9 |
| That's very possible, Joanne - my memory ain't what it used to
be! :^)
&y
PS. Watched MPatHG again last night; "I got better!" :*)
|
124.28 | | SUBPAC::JJENSEN | Jojo the Fishing Widow | Mon Dec 05 1994 16:11 | 6 |
| >> PS. Watched MPatHG again last night; "I got better!" :*)
^^^^^^
^^^^^^
&,
I've already got one, y'see? ..... Yes, it's very niiiiiice.
|
124.29 | ;*) | SPEZKO::FRASER | Mobius Loop; see other side | Mon Dec 05 1994 16:17 | 4 |
| I'm sure it is! Y'know, I can almost imagine you as a Castle
Anthrax denizen rather than a French Taunter!
|
124.30 | Run away! | SUBPAC::JJENSEN | Jojo the Fishing Widow | Mon Dec 05 1994 16:20 | 4 |
| You won't know for sure unless you wander past our
house and we catapult a cow at you, now will you?
And no trojan rabbits, we're onto that one!
|
124.31 | OK Zoot | SPEZKO::FRASER | Mobius Loop; see other side | Mon Dec 05 1994 16:34 | 8 |
| Well, there was only one Scot in there, so you can call me ...
Tim!
Signed,
Manky Scots Git (Mrs., retired)
|
124.32 | | ODIXIE::CIAROCHI | One Less Dog | Thu Dec 08 1994 14:33 | 11 |
| re: earlier...
did somebody mention a 150 pound German Shepherd?
Jesus Mary and Joseph. That's, what, half again the size of a St.
Bernard?
Niiiiice doggie...
Or was this the general size of German Shepherds when dinoaurs walked
the earth?
|
124.33 | | SEAPIG::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA,USPSA/IPSC,NROI-RO | Thu Dec 08 1994 18:27 | 9 |
| <<< Note 124.32 by ODIXIE::CIAROCHI "One Less Dog" >>>
>That's, what, half again the size of a St.
> Bernard?
Not really. St. Bernard's pretty typically run over 200 lbs.
Jim
|
124.34 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Just say `Oh, all right.' | Wed Dec 21 1994 11:58 | 6 |
|
"Dinosaurs are thin at one end, much much thicker in the middle,
then thin again at the other end."
- Ann Elk
|
124.35 | Oh...Ann Elk | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Wed Dec 21 1994 12:11 | 4 |
|
I didn't know an elk could talk!
|
124.36 | | AIMHI::JMARTIN | Barney IS NOT a nerd!! | Wed Dec 21 1994 12:50 | 39 |
| Chris: Uhhhh...that's it is it?
Ann: Right Chris..
Chris: Well you've certainly seem to have hit the nail on the head...
Ann: ...and it's mine
Chris: ..uhh thanks for coming to the studio
Ann: ...right Chris
Chris: ...Britian's new open...
Ann: It's benn alot of fun...
Chris: ...will be playing at the paramount
Ann: Telling my theory that is...
Chris: Ah..yes thankyou
Ann: And visiting...
Chris: Yes...Britia...
Ann: I have another theory...
Chris: Not now thank you...
Ann: The theory the second which is mine...eehhheem...spews out
nonsensical theory
Chris: Shut Up...WILL YOU PLEASE SHUT UP....Look if you don't shut up
I shall shoot you....
Ann: Eeeeehem....The theory I have which is mine which belongs to me
(POW)......Eh...eh....the theory the second...by Ann (Enter machine
gun)
|
124.37 | Scientists : T. rex may have big brother ! | GAAS::BRAUCHER | Frustrated Incorporated | Fri Sep 22 1995 10:32 | 20 |
|
NEW YORK (AP) - Move over, Tyrannosaurus rex.
Newfound fossils reveal a beast that may be the biggest meat-eating
dinosaur known, scientists reported today.
The dinosaur, which resembled T. rex, was 41 to 43 feet long and
weighed 6 to 8 tons when it roamed the plains of what is now Argentina
looking for food to chomp with its huge serrated teeth, scientists said.
It lived about 100 million years ago, which is about 30 million years
before T. rex appeared, said paleontologist Rodolfo Coria of the Carmen
Funes Museum in Neuquen, Argentina.
A bone-by-bone comparison with remains of T. rex suggests the newfound
creature was slightly longer and matbe 3 tons heavier, Coria said. He
and an Argentine colleague reported the find today (9/21/95) in the
journal Nature.
The newfound fossils were discovered by an automobile mechanic who hunts
dinosaur bones as a hobby, Coria said.
(inset : Gagaotosaurus carolini, roughly translated as "Ruben D.
Carolini's enormous southern reptile", after the auto mechanic,
artist's reconstruction of huge monster next to man)
|
124.38 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Fri Sep 22 1995 11:06 | 1 |
| -1 cool! i like dinosaurs
|
124.39 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Feb 27 1996 16:05 | 8 |
| Seen in the Want Advertiser, complete with picture.
T-REX. Museum qual dinosaur w/pneumatic jaw movement & life-lk skin.
Nearly 7' tall. Appearance stops people in their tracks. Plywood
skeleton, fiberglass substructure & latex skin. Rigged for smoke mach
for eerie effect. Creates an incredible attraction for store frt,
restaurant, amusement ctr or lg game rm. Vy hvy, will provide prof
moving. Best model of its kind in NE. $5995.
|
124.40 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Tue Feb 27 1996 16:09 | 2 |
|
.39 you watch - it'll be hanging over richard's cube pretty soon.
|
124.41 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Feb 27 1996 16:10 | 1 |
| But it's vy hvy.
|
124.42 | | SMURF::BINDER | Manus Celer Dei | Tue Feb 27 1996 16:39 | 1 |
| No prb w vy hvy rp
|
124.43 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Tue Jan 07 1997 15:42 | 7 |
124.44 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Give the world a smile each day | Tue Jan 07 1997 16:03 | 4 |
124.45 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Wed Jan 08 1997 10:49 | 1 |
124.46 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Wed Jan 08 1997 10:50 | 2 |
124.47 | | SMURF::BINDER | Errabit quicquid errare potest. | Wed Jan 08 1997 11:19 | 4 |
124.48 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Wed Jan 08 1997 11:29 | 1 |
124.49 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Patented Problem Generator | Wed Jan 08 1997 12:41 | 4 |
124.50 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Wed Jan 08 1997 12:45 | 6 |
124.51 | | SMURF::WALTERS | | Wed Jan 08 1997 12:45 | 2 |
124.52 | | SMURF::BINDER | Errabit quicquid errare potest. | Wed Jan 08 1997 12:46 | 16 |
124.53 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Jan 08 1997 12:47 | 3 |
124.54 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Wed Jan 08 1997 12:48 | 2 |
124.55 | | SMURF::BINDER | Errabit quicquid errare potest. | Wed Jan 08 1997 12:49 | 3 |
124.56 | | SMURF::WALTERS | | Wed Jan 08 1997 12:49 | 1 |
124.57 | | BUSY::SLAB | And one of us is left to carry on. | Wed Jan 08 1997 12:50 | 3 |
124.58 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Patented Problem Generator | Wed Jan 08 1997 12:51 | 1 |
124.59 | | SMURF::BINDER | Errabit quicquid errare potest. | Wed Jan 08 1997 12:51 | 1 |
124.60 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Wed Jan 08 1997 12:51 | 2 |
124.61 | | SMURF::WALTERS | | Wed Jan 08 1997 12:54 | 1 |
124.62 | | BUSY::SLAB | And one of us is left to carry on. | Wed Jan 08 1997 12:55 | 5 |
124.63 | Featuring Stanley Adams as a giant carrot | TLE::RALTO | Leggo My Lego | Wed Jan 08 1997 13:33 | 7 |
124.64 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Wed Jan 08 1997 13:41 | 1 |
124.65 | Judy was a hot tomato | TLE::RALTO | Leggo My Lego | Wed Jan 08 1997 13:57 | 18 |
124.66 | | BUSY::SLAB | Antisocial | Wed Jan 08 1997 14:02 | 7 |
124.67 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Wed Jan 08 1997 14:08 | 2 |
124.68 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Jan 08 1997 14:12 | 4 |
124.69 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Wed Jan 08 1997 14:13 | 4 |
124.70 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Jan 08 1997 14:19 | 10 |
124.71 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Wed Jan 08 1997 14:25 | 1 |
124.72 | He did seem a bit "wooden" as Matt Dillon later | TLE::RALTO | Leggo My Lego | Wed Jan 08 1997 14:29 | 13 |
124.73 | "Dear, don't forget to pick up some Hyponex for the kids" | TLE::RALTO | Leggo My Lego | Wed Jan 08 1997 14:33 | 5 |
124.74 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Ebonics Is Not Apply | Wed Jan 08 1997 17:32 | 11 |
124.75 | "John and Maureen are exploring fuel sites this week" | TLE::RALTO | Leggo My Lego | Thu Jan 09 1997 09:25 | 17 |
124.76 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Thu Jan 09 1997 09:34 | 1 |
124.77 | | BIGHOG::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA,USPSA/IPSC,NROI-RO | Thu Jan 09 1997 09:36 | 7 |
124.78 | | POWDML::HANGGELI | mouth responsibility | Thu Jan 09 1997 09:36 | 6 |
124.79 | Having lots of fun and looking forward to a 4th season | TLE::RALTO | Leggo My Lego | Thu Jan 09 1997 09:45 | 21 |
124.80 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Thu Jan 09 1997 09:46 | 3 |
124.81 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Thu Jan 09 1997 09:48 | 3 |
124.82 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Thu Jan 09 1997 09:48 | 1 |
124.83 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Jan 09 1997 09:53 | 1 |
124.84 | | BIGHOG::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA,USPSA/IPSC,NROI-RO | Thu Jan 09 1997 09:55 | 9 |
124.85 | "No, we do not 'neck' on my planet" | TLE::RALTO | Leggo My Lego | Thu Jan 09 1997 09:56 | 7 |
124.86 | Aha | TLE::RALTO | Leggo My Lego | Thu Jan 09 1997 09:57 | 8 |
124.87 | Getchya celeb gossip right heah... | TLE::RALTO | Leggo My Lego | Thu Jan 09 1997 10:00 | 7 |
124.88 | More than you ever wanted to know. | BIGHOG::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA,USPSA/IPSC,NROI-RO | Thu Jan 09 1997 10:06 | 19 |
124.89 | | BULEAN::BANKS | Orthogonality is your friend | Thu Jan 09 1997 10:18 | 1 |
124.90 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Patented Problem Generator | Thu Jan 09 1997 10:28 | 3 |
124.91 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Ebonics Is Not Apply | Thu Jan 09 1997 12:02 | 8 |
124.92 | | ASIC::RANDOLPH | Tom R. N1OOQ | Thu Jan 09 1997 12:24 | 9 |
124.93 | | DECWET::LOWE | Bruce Lowe, DECwest Eng., DTN 548-8910 | Thu Jan 09 1997 12:31 | 9 |
124.94 | | POWDML::HANGGELI | mouth responsibility | Thu Jan 09 1997 13:16 | 7 |
124.95 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Ebonics Is Not Apply | Thu Jan 09 1997 13:32 | 6 |
124.96 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Thu Jan 09 1997 13:43 | 1 |
124.97 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Patented Problem Generator | Thu Jan 09 1997 13:44 | 1 |
124.98 | | BUSY::SLAB | Catch you later!! | Thu Jan 09 1997 14:08 | 14 |
124.99 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Ebonics Is Not Apply | Thu Jan 09 1997 15:01 | 9 |
124.100 | Oh-oh... | TLE::RALTO | Leggo My Lego | Thu Jan 09 1997 16:37 | 3 |
124.101 | | STAR::EVANS | | Thu Jan 09 1997 17:00 | 11 |
124.102 | | EVMS::MORONEY | SYS$BOOM_BAH | Thu Jan 09 1997 17:14 | 4 |
124.103 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Patented Problem Generator | Thu Jan 09 1997 17:20 | 1 |
124.104 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Ebonics Is Not Apply | Thu Jan 09 1997 17:36 | 1 |
124.105 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Ebonics Is Not Apply | Thu Jan 09 1997 17:40 | 10 |
124.106 | | BUSY::SLAB | Crash, burn ... when will I learn? | Thu Jan 09 1997 17:43 | 3 |
124.107 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Ebonics Is Not Apply | Thu Jan 09 1997 17:44 | 1 |
124.108 | | EVMS::MORONEY | SYS$BOOM_BAH | Thu Jan 09 1997 18:29 | 1 |
124.109 | | BUSY::SLAB | Crazy Cooter comin' atcha!! | Thu Jan 09 1997 18:34 | 5 |
124.110 | found the answer | EVMS::MORONEY | SYS$BOOM_BAH | Thu Jan 09 1997 19:11 | 3 |
124.111 | | BUSY::SLAB | Crazy Cooter comin' atcha!! | Thu Jan 09 1997 19:18 | 10 |
124.112 | | SMURF::WALTERS | | Thu Jan 09 1997 19:28 | 6 |
124.113 | | EVMS::MORONEY | SYS$BOOM_BAH | Thu Jan 09 1997 19:33 | 7 |
124.114 | | BUSY::SLAB | Crazy Cooter comin' atcha!! | Thu Jan 09 1997 19:39 | 14 |
124.115 | | EVMS::MORONEY | SYS$BOOM_BAH | Thu Jan 09 1997 19:56 | 10 |
124.116 | | BUSY::SLAB | Crazy Cooter comin' atcha!! | Thu Jan 09 1997 20:07 | 13 |
124.117 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Thu Jan 09 1997 20:10 | 3 |
124.118 | | POMPY::LESLIE | andy ��� leslie, DTN 847 6586 | Fri Jan 10 1997 04:40 | 5 |
124.119 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Ebonics Is Not Apply | Fri Jan 10 1997 09:08 | 1 |
124.120 | Pop-pop | TLE::RALTO | Leggo My Lego | Fri Jan 10 1997 09:33 | 18 |
124.121 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Ebonics Is Not Apply | Fri Jan 10 1997 09:56 | 9 |
124.122 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Give the world a smile each day | Fri Jan 10 1997 09:59 | 6 |
124.123 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Spott Itj | Fri Jan 10 1997 10:04 | 1 |
124.124 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Give the world a smile each day | Fri Jan 10 1997 10:16 | 10 |
124.125 | "ahem!" | MPGS::WOOLNER | Your dinner is in the supermarket | Fri Jan 10 1997 10:35 | 5 |
124.126 | | SMURF::BINDER | Errabit quicquid errare potest. | Fri Jan 10 1997 11:33 | 17 |
124.127 | My faves - Hall of Meteorites and Hall of Gems.... | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Fri Jan 10 1997 13:23 | 8 |
124.128 | I adore the MNH | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Spott Itj | Fri Jan 10 1997 13:25 | 3 |
124.129 | | SMURF::BINDER | Errabit quicquid errare potest. | Fri Jan 10 1997 13:39 | 8 |
124.130 | Another 'why dinosaurs are extinct' cartoon | EVMS::MORONEY | SYS$BOOM_BAH | Fri Jan 10 1997 13:49 | 10 |
124.131 | | DECWIN::JUDY | That's *Ms. Bitch* to you!! | Fri Jan 10 1997 14:43 | 7 |
124.132 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Spott Itj | Fri Jan 10 1997 14:45 | 3 |
124.133 | | DECWIN::JUDY | That's *Ms. Bitch* to you!! | Fri Jan 10 1997 14:52 | 7 |
124.134 | | BUSY::SLAB | Don't like my p_n? 1-800-328-7448 | Fri Jan 10 1997 14:55 | 8 |
124.135 | The current mount is quite likely incorrect.... | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Fri Jan 10 1997 15:09 | 7 |
124.136 | | DECWIN::JUDY | That's *Ms. Bitch* to you!! | Fri Jan 10 1997 15:53 | 7 |
124.137 | | SMURF::BINDER | Errabit quicquid errare potest. | Fri Jan 10 1997 16:30 | 5 |
124.138 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Patented Problem Generator | Fri Jan 10 1997 16:30 | 1 |
124.139 | Throughout the exhibit, they *emphasized* uncertainty.... | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Fri Jan 10 1997 16:50 | 9 |
124.140 | | SMURF::WALTERS | | Sun Jan 12 1997 10:56 | 13 |
124.141 | | SMURF::BINDER | Errabit quicquid errare potest. | Mon Jan 13 1997 08:53 | 4 |
124.142 | | GOJIRA::JESSOP | | Mon Jan 13 1997 14:23 | 2 |
124.143 | | SMURF::WALTERS | | Mon Jan 13 1997 14:35 | 8
|