We’ve been through your museum 2 years ago. Absolutely LOVED it. It’s a critically important piece of anybody’s journey.
Just a thought based on the above newsletter: I’ve heard (possibly the late Chuck Missler, or Ian Juby…I forget) that T.rex is now considered to be a herbivore by a growing number of YE Scientists and even evolutionists. Based on tooth shape and other things.
I have no other reference for that, just my faulty memory. Their point was that movies like Jurassic Park, etc all get it horribly wrong when they portray T.rex as a bottomless stomach full of meat and blood.
Maybe you’re a better researcher than I am, and can find out if there’s any meat to that theory. (ha ha)
from Canada, thank you.
Thanks for visiting the museum. I’m unaware of any studies done that show T-Rex other than a meat-eater. There has been discussion about whether it was a predator or a scavenger. Thanks for checking in!
We’ve been through your museum 2 years ago. Absolutely LOVED it. It’s a critically important piece of anybody’s journey.
Just a thought based on the above newsletter: I’ve heard (possibly the late Chuck Missler, or Ian Juby…I forget) that T.rex is now considered to be a herbivore by a growing number of YE Scientists and even evolutionists. Based on tooth shape and other things.
I have no other reference for that, just my faulty memory. Their point was that movies like Jurassic Park, etc all get it horribly wrong when they portray T.rex as a bottomless stomach full of meat and blood.
Maybe you’re a better researcher than I am, and can find out if there’s any meat to that theory. (ha ha)
from Canada, thank you.
Thanks for visiting the museum. I’m unaware of any studies done that show T-Rex other than a meat-eater. There has been discussion about whether it was a predator or a scavenger. Thanks for checking in!