cover

挖掘过去38 - 英语听力

挖掘过去38-英语听力.mp3
[00:00.000]But rather a lumbering scavenger. [00:0...
[00:00.000]But rather a lumbering scavenger.
[00:04.403]This theory has polarised the world of palaeontology,
[00:08.144]and I must admit,
[00:09.152]it's severely dented the image I've held most dear since I was a small boy.
[00:13.404]So I'm heading to the bowels of the building
[00:17.155]to get to the bottom of the controversy.
[00:19.395]Hello, Paul.
[00:23.398]Hi, Mark.
[00:24.146]And the man I'm pinning my hopes on
[00:25.894]is palaeontologist Paul Barratt.
[00:28.403]He's promised me a rare glimpse of one of the museum's most important fossils.
[00:32.894]Ah. I've wanted to see this for years.
[00:36.650]Can I touch it?
[00:37.393]Yep, sure.
[00:38.144]This is the left lower jaw of an actual T Rex.
[00:42.404]This was found in 1900 in Wyoming,
[00:45.892]and actually it used to have a different name Dynamosaurus Imperiosus
[00:49.898]which I actually think is quite a good name.
[00:52.143]Later on it was realised
[00:54.150]that it's just another T Rex.
[00:55.904]Just another T Rex?
[00:56.904]That's outrageous.
[00:57.901]I'm sorry,
[00:58.399]I think the crown is starting to slip slightly from this animal now.
展开