"Well, what is it then," I asked rather huffily.
"It is a dimetrodon and it lived in the Permian period....BEFORE the dinosaurs," she said matter-of-factly.
Yes, I did learn a lot on this trip.
Our first activity on the first day was a trip to the St. George Dinosaur Discovery Site at Johnson Farm, a dinosaur museum in St. George. The site was discovered by a farmer who was leveling the site for building. Fortunately, he stopped the work and called the University of Utah. A portion of the site has been left intact and the museum was built over it.
The bones and fossils recovered here are from the Jurassic Period, about 195 million years ago when the area was a large lake. I tried to imagine a lake in the surrounding arid area which boasted a temperature of 100+ degrees while we were there. It was difficult.
The museum has a collection of authentic dinosaur eggs which have allowed them to study eggs, nests, and embryos of the dinosaurs. The photo below is of a single block of dinosaur tracks on display at the museum. There are over 49 individual tracks, many in rows, which give evidence of the way the track maker moved.
We were very privileged to have St. George's City Paleontologist, Andrew Milner, as our guide through the museum. He patiently gave explanations and answered questions about his work and all the things we saw. He gave a detailed explanation of using a track way to discover how an animal moved and sat. These types of discoveries often shed new light and negate previous theories.

"It was much larger than I expected," she told me.


All work and no play, makes a very dull child. The children hit the pool before dinner to work off a little extra energy after a long day of exciting learning.
WOW! Such a great time for Abs, I know that she learned something something about the past and a process of learning that will help in her future education.
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