Bob Bakker is one.
You can of course find dinosaur bones in museums, but if your looking for dinosaur bones, you should look in the east coast of australia, there are some sights were you can find exactly where they are. =)
Dinosaur bones from Africa being found on the eastern shores of south america
I believe it's Alberta because some dinosaurs have been named after places there like the Albertosaurus
All dinosaur fossils of dinosaurs come from rocks. Most are bones, but some have been footprints, feces, skin impressions, or even mummified individuals, complete with fossilized soft tissue.
Fossils are nearly always found in some type of sedimentary rock. Limestone is a sedimentary rock which very commonly contains fossils, as is coal.
In 1838, John Estaugh Hopkins was digging and found some interesting bones, which he displayed in his home. In 1858, William Parker Foulke saw the bones. He was interested and dug up the rest of the skeleton. That was the discovery of Hadrosaurus.
The cliffs are chalk. There are some fossils in the chalk though.
it may come from some dinosaur bones that were dug up and mistook for dragons
dinosaur bones Shells Found in a layer of rock but not all are neccesarily found there, some may be found in volcanic debree and in other settings
Dinosaurs are not mythical they lived hundreds,and hundreds,and hundreds of years ago
i think some scientist may have found some, but, logically, no
People have been finding dinosaur fossils for hundreds of years, probably even thousands of years. There are references to "dragon" bones found in Wucheng, Sichuan, China (written by Chang Qu) over 2,000 years ago; these were probably dinosaur fossils. Much later, in 1676, a huge thigh bone (femur) was found in England by Reverend Plot. It was thought that the bone belonged to a "giant," but was probably from a dinosaur. A report of this find was published by R. Brookes in 1763. The first dinosaur to be described scientifically was Megalosaurus in 1824, by William Buckland. Buckland (1784-1856) was a British fossil hunter and clergyman who discovered some Megalosaurus fossils in 1819 and named the reptile in 1824. It was the first dinosaur ever described scientifically and first theropod dinosaur discovered (this is all in hindsight, because the dinosaurs had not yet been recognized as a separate taxonomic group - the word dinosaur hadn't even been invented yet).