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Meek Dinosaur May Inherit the State

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From Times wire services

The Atreipus milfordensis may not be as ferocious as the tyrannosaurus, as big as the brontosaurus or as fast as the velociraptor. But the extinct dog-sized plant-eater may soon own a title the others don’t: Pennsylvania state dinosaur.

Paleontologists believe it traveled in flocks across the eastern U.S. about 200 million years ago.

A bill to nominate the dinosaur is to be introduced in the Legislature this month. Ten other states have designated state dinosaurs.

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At least one lawmaker isn’t sold on the idea. “I grew up in a meat-and-potatoes district, so I’d like to have a carnivorous state dinosaur,” said state Rep. Jim Wansacz, a Lackawanna Democrat. “Why would we want a wimpy dinosaur?”

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