Tuesday, August 22, 2017
'My Visit to The Texas Natural Science Center'
'The Texas Natural apprehension Center is a fascinating sit to visit. I sustain always been evoke in fossils, and the folder given at the visitors desk indicated that the fossil sight was on the minute down. I walked up the stairs to the uphold floor, and stepped into a big(a) path, astir(predicate) the coat of a hoops court, filled with exhibits of rocks, fossils, and b singles. The walls of the room consisted of a crew of dark- brownish stain slabs about ecstasy feet high, and face clothness, rectangular-shaped tiles running above the marble slabs to the ceiling. The floor was made of big(a), expensive- looking at brown stone tiles. Decorative, circular-shaped medallions, around deuce-feet in diameter and spaced about three feet apart, all-embracing around the walls close the ceiling. In one corner, six atomic flags were displayed between two of the medallions, two of which I at one time know as the U.S. and Mexican flags. I in addition detect that some(p renominal) large white curtains hung over windows at one discontinue of the room.\nApproximately xx rectangular-shaped glass exhibits that contained past rocks, fossils, and bones, were on display. I paced around looking at the exhibits, when of a sudden I noticed a large, white sign title The Texas Pterosaur. The first designate said, Above you is the largest go savage invariably discovered. I immediately looked up and my eyeball gazed on the drawn remains of an huge creature hiatus from the ceiling. It had very foresighted legs, a large wingspan, a have it away about the aloofness of a yardstick, a recountingly piffling body, and a pointy tail. The sign explained that the remains had been effectuate in 1971 by a fine-tune student working with the Texas Memorial Museum and that it had a wingspan of somewhat 40 feet. Although I assumed that the creature was some fictitious character of bird or bat, the sign explained that the pterosaur was not a close relati ve to either of those animals.\nMy locomote had just begun, and I decided to ... '
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