 | At the Flaming Cliffs in the Gobi Desert of Mongolia, American Museum of Natural History paleontologists Mark Norell (left) and Mike Novacek (right) examine a fossilized Oviraptor egg. Photo: Bill Reeve | | Download Still | |
 | At the paleo lab at Ghost Ranch, New Mexico, grad student Sterling Nesbitt (standing) and Ghost Ranch staff paleontologist Alex Downs examine the fossilized remains of several Coelophysis dinosaurs discovered at the Ranch. Photo: Bill Reeve | | Download Still | |
 | At the Ghost Ranch dig site, graduate students Sterling Nesbitt, Alan Turner, Nate Smith and Randy Irmis carry a newly discovered fossil, wrapped in plaster, for shipment to the museum. Further preparation and examination of this fossil has since determined it is a new dinosaur and one of the earliest every found in North America. Photo: Bill Reeve | | Download Still | |
 | Filming the sunrise at the Singing Sands, made all that more spectacular by the reflections of water from unusually heavy spring rains in the Gobi Desert. Photo: Duncan Clark | | Download Still | |
 | AMNH paleontologist Mark Norell and Mongolian Ph.D. candidate Boldra Mingin with a Tarbosaurus bone on the hood of their jeep. Photo: David Clark | | Download Still | |
 | The famous fighting dinosaurs, on exhibit at the Natural History Museum in Ulaan Baator, Mongolia. The Protoceratops is standing over a Velociraptor with the Velociraptor claw in its mouth. Photo: David Clark | | Download Still | |
 | Film crew prepares a shot from atop a giant fallen redwood tree. In the film, a 1500-pound, 15-foot dinosaur will be perched on this tree. Photo: David Clark | | Download Still | |
 | The Piedra Lumbre mesa (Dakota Formation) rising above the New Mexican badlands near Ghost Ranch. Within these rock formations are fossils from the Cretaceous, Jurassic and Triassic Periods of dinosaurs, reaching back 230 million years. Photo: Duncan Clark | | Download Still | |
 | CGI of Tarchia and Tarbosaurus encounter one another in combat on the Gobi Desert of 80 million years ago Photo: DamnFX | | Download Still | |
 | On display at the American Museum of Natural History, a fossil of an oviraptorid dinosaur that died while sitting on its nest of eggs in the Gobi Desert. Note the two eggs to the right and the oviraptorid's two crescent-shaped claws. Photo: David Clark | | Download Still | |
 | Grad students Sterling Nesbitt (foreground) and Nathan Smith excavate a new dinosaur discovered at Ghost Ranch, New Mexico. Photo: Duncan Clark | | Download Still | |
 | Co-Directors Bayley Silleck (black shirt) and David Clark at Arizona's Petrified Forest National Park, where the IMAX team filmed 200-million-year-old fossilized trees. Photo: Duncan Clark | | Download Still | |
 | Grad student Sterling Nesbitt (center left) excavates new finds at Ghost Ranch with Dr. Kevin Padian, U.C. Berkeley (center right w/knee pads) who is this dig's project director. Photo: Bill Reeve | | Download Still | |
 | The American Museum of Natural History's 65-million-year-old horned and shield-headed Triceratops is located in the Hall of Ornithischian Dinosaurs. This specimen has a partly healed injury on its three-horned skull, possibly caused by another Triceratops. Photo: Bill Reeve | | Download Still | |
 | The American Museum of Natural History's renowned Tyrannosaurus Rex - completely dissassembled, cleaned, prepared, and repositioned in a sleek, stalking pose, with its head looming just above visitors - is located in the Hall of Saurischian Dinosaurs. Photo: Bill Reeve | | Download Still | |
 | The New Mexico Museum of Natural History's Science Age of Super Giants Hall gives visitors the experience of walking into a life-size diorama where Seismosaurus and Saurophaganax are locked in mortal combat. The fossil specimens from each animal are on display in the hall for visitors to see. Photo: Bill Reeve | | Download Still | |
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| Roy Chapman Andrews (second from right) and team excavate bones of a large mammal. Mongolia. Central Asiatic Expedition, 1928. Photo Credit: J. B. Shackelford, Courtesy: American Museum of Natural History | | Download Still | |

| Camel caravan traveling across sand dunes of the Gobi. Mongolia. Third Asiatic Expedition, 1925. Photo Credit: J. B. Shackelford, Courtesy: American Museum of Natural History | | Download Still | |

| "Enroute from Kalgan to Peking - we stopped near a Chinese walled city to cool the motors." Mongolia. Central Asiatic Expedition, 1928 Photo Credit: J. B. Shackelford, Courtesy: American Museum of Natural History | | Download Still | |

| "At the nest of the even dozen dinosaur eggs." Olsen, who found them, at left; Andrews at right. Mongolia. Third Asiatic Expedition, 1925 Photo Credit: J. B. Shackelford, Courtesy: American Museum of Natural History | | Download Still | |