(music plays)

Kara and David stand in a TV studio. Behind them, two wall screens read "Dino Days."
Kara is in her early thirties, with short wavy black hair. She wears a safari hat, a purple shirt and a safari vest.
David is in his mid-thirties, with a beard and brown hair. He wears glasses and a stripped green and gray zip sweater over a gray T-shirt.

Holding a notebook, Kara says WE HAVE AN e-mail FROM
NATE, WHO'S FOUR, FROM
INNISVILLE: HOW DO YOU FIND
DINOSAUR BONES TO DIG UP?
LIKE HOW DO YOU KNOW WHERE TO
LOOK?

David says WELL THE FIRST, THE
FIRST THING THAT YOU NEED TO DO
IS GO TO ROCKS THAT ARE THE
RIGHT AGE.

Kara says OKAY.

A caption reads "David. Dino Expert. The Space."

David says SO YOU GOT TO FIND
ROCKS THAT ARE AT THE SURFACE
THAT YOU CAN GO AND LOOK FOR
FOSSILS IN THAT ARE BETWEEN
250 AND 65 MILLION YEARS AGO,
WHEN DINOSAURS WERE AROUND.

David says AND THEN WE JUST WALK
AND WE LOOK FOR PIECES OF FOSSIL
BONE THAT LOOKS LIKE THIS.

A dinosaur skull and bone sit on a red cloth.

Kara says OH, WOW!

David says AND WE FIND THOSE
LITTLE BROKEN PIECES, WE LOOK UP
THE HILL, BECAUSE THEY HAD TO
WASH OUT OF THE HILL THROUGH
EROSION, AND WHEN WE HOPEFULLY
FIND A PIECE OF A FOSSIL COMING
OUT OF A ROCK LAYER, AND THEN WE
START DIGGING IN, AND FOLLOWING
THAT BONE INTO THAT ROCK LAYER,
AND HOPEFULLY WE FIND A WHOLE
SKELETON.