pokeplayer984:Just one time period, you mean? Just one trip? Wow, I don’t think I can choose.

If I did go, I would want to have adequate protection against any predators of the time period in question (not to mention parasites and diseases). Assuming I was safe from creating any temporal paradoxes,

I’d also want to make it a full-fledged scientific expedition, bringing back photographs, specimens, and DNA samples for further research. I would also be inclined to not limit my paleo-safari to a single locality, but to travel all around the world, viewing and cataloguing as much prehistoric wildlife as I could.
The late Cretaceous (~70 million years ago) is definitely a major candidate for a period I’d like to visit. North America, of course, had
Triceratops,
Ankylosaurus,
Tyrannosaurus, and duck-billed, bone-headed, and egg stealer-type dinosaurs at that time. Recent studies have suggested that some of these dinosaurs changed dramatically as they grew (
Triceratops’s horns apparently changed shape with age, and boneheads may have grown crowns of spikes on their heads, and then lost them as their skull domes grew in); an opportunity to chart the growth of the living animals would be unmissable.
I’d also want to visit Mongolia, home of
Deinocheirus and
Therizinosaurus, both huge dinosaurs with giant claws, each known only from a pair of fossilized arms and a few other skeletal fragments. I’d love to see what they looked like in life.
Madagascar also has some critters I’d like to see, including the thick-skulled sharptooth
Majungasaurus; the orthodonty-defying theropod
Masiakasaurus, the flying raptor
Rahonavis, and the burrowing, herbivorous, pug-nosed crocodile :!
Simosuchus.
While prehistoric creatures don’t have to be large to hold my interest, there were a quite a few animals scattered around the world in the Late Cretaceous that were among the largest of their respective kinds, all of which I’d want to make a point of seeing. These include
Mauisaurus (a more-than-50-foot plesiosaur) in New Zealand,
Hatzegopteryx (a pterosaur that could stare down a giraffe at ground level) in Romania,
Mosasaurus (a giant marine lizard that would have made a Komodo dragon look like a gecko) in the Netherlands, and, in Argentina,
Puertasaurus, a longneck known from only four fossil vertebrae, but estimated to have been one of the most gargantuan land animals that ever lived. It is speculatively reconstructed
here in comparison with
Giganotosaurus (one of the biggest known sharpteeth) and a human. Even as a jaded dinosaur fanatic, this illustrationóspecifically, the obscene humongousness of its principal subjectómade me go

:blink:

.
There are TONS of other times that I’d love to visit, but considering the length of the description I’ve given for just one, I think I’ll stop here. (Unless you WANT me to give more examples.

)
Rat Lady:Well...the Thanksgiving celebration (which we held on Friday, so that my brother could join us for it) was pretty good, but the “official” Thanksgiving Day wasn’t so great.
Cancerian Tiger:I love birds, and have certainly thought that it might be nice to own one, but I can’t see it happening anytime soon. (Sasquatch, of course, is one of the chief reasons why not.)