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The News about Dinosaurs

Patricia Lauber
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Plot Summary

The News about Dinosaurs

Nonfiction | Book | Middle Grade | Published in 1993

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The News about Dinosaurs (1989) is a nonfiction book for children by the acclaimed author Patricia Lauber. In a career spanning more than fifty years, Lauber wrote 125 informational books for children. She received the Washington Post/Children’s Book Guild Award for her lifetime contribution to children’s nonfiction. In The News about Dinosaurs, Lauber contrasts the findings of early dinosaur scientists with new theories and modern discoveries about the “terrible lizards.” Lauber offers detailed information on a wide variety of dinosaurs, including their names, diet, habitat, reproduction, and identifying characteristics. The book features full-color illustrations by many well-known paleoartists. Publishers Weekly calls The News about Dinosaurs, “A sure-fire choice for dinosaur fans.” The book was listed as an SLJ Book of the Year and a Booklist Editor’s Choice selection.

The News about Dinosaurs opens with a guide to pronouncing the names of all the dinosaurs featured in the book. Lauber then describes the history of dinosaurs; from their first discovery in the early 1800s to their disappearance. Each topical section in the book begins by explaining original theories about dinosaurs, then is followed with a section headed “The News Is,” updating the reader with contemporary knowledge and new discoveries in the field. Throughout The News about Dinosaurs, Lauber uses clear and accessible language to describe scientific terms like “meteorites” and “iridium,” making the book approachable to young readers.

Detailed, vibrant illustrations accompany the text, varying from half-page drawings to large, two-page spreads. The illustrations showcase different illustrators and their unique styles, including everything from paintings that have a nearly photographic quality, to black-and-white sketches. Featured artists include Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins, the first natural history artist to sculpt and paint dinosaurs based on scientific knowledge of the time; Gregory S. Paul, an illustrator famed for his work in paleontology; Mark Hallett, the illustrator who created the phrase “paleoart;” and Douglas Henderson and John Gurche, both well-regarded paleoartists. For each illustration, Lauber provides a caption, identifying the dinosaurs and describing what is happening in the picture. Her interpretations add a story-like immediacy to the images.



Lauber begins with the discovery of the dinosaurs, explaining that after 100 years, scientists thought they had found out everything there was to know, but then counters with the “news” that scientists are still discovering dinosaurs including the Baryonyx, the Deinonychus, whose name means “terrible claw,” the Nanotyrannus, and the Mamenchisaurus. One illustration depicts a pair of Deinonychus whom Lauber describes as “just awakened, hungry, and ready to hunt.”

Lauber continues to dispel other myths. While scientists originally thought that dinosaurs were like today’s reptiles—slow-moving, not very smart creatures that walked with bent knees—current discoveries of fossil footprints show that, in fact, dinosaurs were “lively and active,” and good walkers who often traveled far for food. Lauber highlights the discovery of the Brontosaurus in the 1870s: a full skeleton without a skull. Scientists later found a skull they believed fit the body, but in fact, the skull belonged to a different dinosaur. “The news is” the Brontosaurus had already been discovered and named the Apatosaurus. Today, people still use the general name, Brontosaurus, to describe large plant-eaters, but Apatosaurus is the correct name for the unique dinosaur.

Contemporary research also shows that plant-eaters did not spend most of their time in the water, as earlier scientists believed. Not only do footprints show they foraged over long distances, but they also traveled in herds. Meat-eaters hunted in packs or pairs. This news dispels the old beliefs that dinosaurs were solitary creatures, like reptiles. Similarly, the study of fossilized eggshells and the wear patterns on the teeth of young dinosaurs reveals that some species of dinosaurs protected and cared for their young.



Lauber examines the early belief that all dinosaurs were cold-blooded like today’s reptiles. Now, scientists think there might have been warm-blooded dinosaurs, like the Deinonychus. Small, quick-moving meat-eaters would have needed a lot of energy to attack. Lauber also explains the new theory that birds descended from dinosaurs and that feathered dinosaurs may have existed.

Finally, Lauber looks at the old theory that climate change killed the dinosaurs. Newer theories point instead to a meteor collision that caused clouds of iridium dust which hid the sun, killing the plants and all the dinosaurs. Scientists discovered a layer of clay in rocks that were 65 million years old—the time when the dinosaurs disappeared—that contains iridium. Iridium is an element that comes from meteorites. A volcanic eruption is another possible explanation for the die-off, as iridium is also found deep inside the earth.

The News about Dinosaurs concludes with the news that dinosaur hunters are still making discoveries today. Analysis of the bone structure of dinosaur skulls, for instance, shows that dinosaurs had heightened senses of sight, smell, and hearing. They also had the ability to make sounds. Most scientists believe that dinosaurs had distinctive coloring and markings like today’s animals. Lauber assures the reader that when scientists learn new information about dinosaurs, “their discoveries will be reported in the news.” A complete index rounds out the book.



Lauber was the founding editor-in-chief of Science World and the chief editor in math and science for Grolier’s The New Book of Knowledge encyclopedia. Her title, Volcano: The Eruption and Healing of St. Helens won a Newbery Honor Award in 1986.
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