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Sunday, January 22, 2017

My Visit to The Texas Natural Science Center

The Texas Natural Science touch is a fascinating commit to visit. I have incessantlylastingly been interested in fogeys, and the leaflet given at the visitors desk indicated that the fossil collection was on the bet on floor. I walked up the stairs to the second floor, and stepped into a en boastfuld fashion, somewhat the size of a basketball court, filled with exhibits of rocks, fossils, and b one(a)s. The walls of the room consisted of a combination of chocolate- cook marble slabs about ten feet high, and white, rectangular-shaped tiles running above the marble slabs to the ceiling. The floor was made of large, expensive-looking brown stone tiles. Decorative, circular-shaped medallions, almost two-feet in diameter and spaced about three feet apart, extended near the walls near the ceiling. In one corner, six small flags were displayed amongst two of the medallions, two of which I immediately recognized as the U.S. and Mexican flags. I withal noticed that several lar ge white curtains hung over windows at one end of the room.\n some twenty rectangular-shaped glass exhibits that contained prehistorical rocks, fossils, and bones, were on display. I paced some looking at the exhibits, when all at once I noticed a large, white chump name The Texas Pterosaur. The first sentence said, supra you is the largest flying brute ever discovered. I immediately looked up and my eyes gazed on the bony remains of an enormous creature hanging from the ceiling. It had very tenacious legs, a large wingspan, a neck about the length of a yardstick, a relatively small body, and a pointy tail. The consecrate explained that the remains had been found in 1971 by a potash alum student working with the Texas repository Museum and that it had a wingspan of approximately 40 feet. Although I presume that the creature was some eccentric person of bird or bat, the sign explained that the pterosaur was not a close relative to either of those animals.\nMy journey had just begun, and I decided to ...

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