Quote:
Originally Posted by jamesqf
Just plain wrong, like everything else you've posted here. The La Brea (note the spelling) contains bones of animals (mostly mammals & birds) from the late Pleistocene, up to roughly 50,000 years ago. The dinosaurs became extinct 65 million years ago. No dinosaur fossils have ever been found there. See e.g. La Brea Tar Pits - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia if you'd like to actually learn something, instead of continuing to display your monumental ignorance on subjects ranging from geophysics and paleontology to basic arithmetic and spelling.
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Funny I could have swarm they displayed Dinosaurs (bones) when I visited there in the 80s...some 25 to 30 years ago, so my memory is off a little...
But the concept may be still sound, how many thousands of Dinosaurs would it have taken to create that tap pit, if oil and tar are really Dinosaurs??
Dude lighten up...this is a conversation, not hard science..I am working off the top of my head, and not with a research grant or tech help..or a fact checker...
I am just throwing things at the wall to see what sticks.
So I misspelled La Brea, so give me a black star...when spell check saw La Brea it had no answer..so I thought I had it right..Brea still comes up with no correct correction.
The important thing here is what I have learned.
And believe me I have gotten a few very interesting answers and I am very happy with the results.
Rich