If you’re one of the 18,000 people who visited the dinosaur exhibit last year at The Quinte Museum of Natural History, located in Trenton, you may be wondering where the dinosaurs have gone, and why they’ve been replaced by whales.
If you’re one of the 18,000 people who visited the dinosaur exhibit last year at The Quinte Museum of Natural History, located in Trenton, you may be wondering where the dinosaurs have gone, and why they’ve been replaced by whales.
If you’re one of the 18,000 people who visited the dinosaur exhibit last year at The Quinte Museum of Natural History, located in Trenton, you may be wondering where the dinosaurs have gone, and why they’ve been replaced by whales.
If you’re one of the 18,000 people who visited the dinosaur exhibit last year at The Quinte Museum of Natural History, located in Trenton, you may be wondering where the dinosaurs have gone, and why they’ve been replaced by whales.
If you’re one of the 18,000 people who visited the dinosaur exhibit last year at The Quinte Museum of Natural History, located in Trenton, you may be wondering where the dinosaurs have gone, and why they’ve been replaced by whales.