Science book #3: About picking up the jargon - "Katie and the Dinosaurs" by James Mayhew

This book makes the cut, not necessarily because I find it particularly endearing (although it is a lovely story, and ever so British in a Paddington Bear sort of way), but because this is the book responsible for my kids, 2 and a half and almost 5 in age, stomping around the house like dinosaurs, roaring and of course, very loudly.

i-0ebff37f79c4b197eeaef1e5d47ef235-katiedinosaurs.jpg

And even more impressive is that my kids are actually uttering words like Triceratops, Iguanodon, Tyrannosaurus Rex, Ankylosaurus, Stegosaurus, and the like, which gives me no end of pleasure.

The book is also set in London's Natural History Museum, a place which happens to hold a special place in my heart, or perhaps more fitting, a special place in my head. You see, one of my earliest childhood memories is being confronted by this massive life size blue whale replica, the largest living animal in the world. As a child, I remember being in awe of this whole spectacle as it eerily hung in a huge hall within London's Natural History Museum. In one very big symbol, it seems to encompass all of my childhood ambitions and interests that led me to the world of biology. For this reason, I view it as an important part of why I am who I am today.

In retrospect, it's a little odd that I would have been so overwhelmed by this experience. But with all of my expertise in genetics and biochemistry, I find it strangely comforting to realize that none of my scientific knowledge can provide any reasonable explanation for why I would care so much for this really really big animal.

Anyway, if you're ever in London, you should check it out. For now, you can visit by clicking here.

i-62138974ef5837fe93cea2ea7b49b127-blue-whale-large_3167_1.jpg

More like this

Dr. Robert Bakker is one of the most famous paleontologists working today, an iconoclastic figure who has played a leading role of rehabilitating our understanding of dinosaurs from the inception of the "Dinosaur Renaissance" through the present. He is currently the curator of paleontology for the…
I was going to title this post 'How a tyrannosaur was mounted', or 'How to mount a tyrannosaur', but that seemed childish. Eventually I went for a title based on a movie, as that isn't at all childish. If I could travel in time, high on the list of things to do would be visits to see dead animals:…
A mother Tyrannosaurus rex and her offspring at the end of the WWD live show. Robotic dinosaurs have long been a thorn in the side of students of paleontology; the rigid, roaring robots of the "DinoMotion" craze of the 1990's did little more than get more people into museums without providing…
The trailer for the film The Land That Time Forgot. My first impression of what a dinosaur was conjured up images of creatures impossibly big and toothy, real-life monsters with names that sounded like they could very well have been out of mythology rather than science. I didn't know that they…