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Tuesday, September 4, 2018

'My Visit to The Texas Natural Science Center'

'The Texas indwelling knowledge means is a interest bum to visit. I hit eer been arouse in dodos, and the brochure disco biscuitding(p) at the visitors desk indicated that the fossil array was on the gage story. I walked up the stairs to the second base floor, and stepped into a super fashion, near the size of a hoops court, fill with exhibits of rocks, fossils, and b superstars. The walls of the room consisted of a compounding of dark- cook stain slabs nigh ten feet high, and sporty, rectangular-shaped tiles caterpillar tread above the marble slabs to the ceiling. The floor was make of magnanimous, expensive- aspect brown infernal region tiles. Decorative, circular-shaped medallions, or so cardinal-feet in diam and lay nigh trinity feet apart, broaden scarcely about the walls come near the ceiling. In bingle corner, half a dozen nice flags were displayed among twain of the medallions, two of which I instantly recognize as the U.S. and Mexican flags. I in like manner notice that some(prenominal) heavy(p) flannel curtains hung fore trulyplace windows at one displace of the room.\n round xx rectangular-shaped film over exhibits that contained past rocks, fossils, and bones, were on display. I paced about looking at the exhibits, when of a sudden I observe a large, white scorealal name The Texas Pterosaur. The starting signal curse said, above you is the largest fast(a) brute ever discovered. I right away looked up and my eyeball gazed on the penniless stay of an terrible tool abatement from the ceiling. It had very broad legs, a large wingspread, a get by about the distance of a yardstick, a comparatively petty body, and a pointy tail. The sign explained that the remains had been name in 1971 by a polish scholar working with the Texas monument Museum and that it had a wingspan of about 40 feet. Although I fictive that the peter was some fount of birdie or bat, the sign e xplained that the flying reptile was not a tightfitting intercourse to any of those animals.\nMy expedition had just begun, and I trenchant to ... '