
Paul Scull - University of Pennsylvania Athletics
Jul 6, 2016 · Paul Scull holds the oldest unbroken record in Penn football history. His single game record of 312 all-purpose yards has stood for 73 years. Set during the final game of the 1928 season against Cornell, Scull scored four touchdowns, recorded seven after-touchdown points, passed for 229 yards, intercepted one pass, returned kickoffs for 75 ...
Andrewsarchus, 'Superb Skull' in Whales Exhibit | AMNH
Jul 3, 2013 · A day or two after the team’s arrival, Kan Chuen Pao (pictured below), a young paleontological assistant, made an amazing find: “the superb skull of a gigantic beast,” as described by the expedition’s leader Roy Chapman Andrews, who would later become the Museum’s director. At nearly 3 feet long, the skull was massive, and its teeth ...
Andrewsarchus – a mysterious giant - DinoAnimals.com
In the mysterious windswept lands of Inner Mongolia, beneath an ocean of golden sand, ancient secrets lie waiting to shed light upon the enigmatic beasts that once ruled the Earth. One such tantalizing enigma is a creature unearthed in the Irdin Manha Formation. Deep in the ancient history of our planet, there roamed a creature unlike any other.
Paul Scull - Wikipedia
Paul Thomas "Butterball" Scull, Sr. (September 4, 1907 – December 11, 1997) was an American football player. Considered a triple-threat man while playing for Penn from 1926 to 1928, he was a consensus first-team All-American halfback in 1928.
Andrewsarchus | Dinosaurs - Pictures and Facts
Andrewsarchus was a mammal which lived approximately 48 to 41 million years ago during the Middle Eocene Period. It was first discovered in Mongolia by Kan Chuen Pao in 1923. It was later described and named by Henry Fairfield Osborn in 1924.
Central Asiatic Expedition - AMNH
A day or two after the team’s arrival, Kan Chuen Pao, a young paleontological assistant, made an amazing find: a massive, 1-meter-long (3-feet-long) skull with huge teeth. It was given the name Andrewsarchus mongoliensis, in honor of the expedition’s leader, Roy Chapman Andrews.
Known from a single, large skull that was dug up 100 years ago, Andrewsarchus mongoliensis has to be one of the most enigmatic large mammals known from the prehistoric past. Just what was this beast, how did it live, and why did it become extinct?
Paul Scull Obituary (1952 - 2022) - Reading, PA - Reading Eagle
Mar 25, 2022 · Paul E. Scull II, 69, passed March 23rd in Penn State Health St. Joseph’s. He was the husband of Marianne “Tudie” (Price) Scull. Born in Reading, PA he was the son of Paul E. Scull and Leora...
Paul Scull College Stats, School, Draft, Gamelog, Splits | College ...
Check out Paul Scull's College Stats, School, Draft, Gamelog, Splits and More College Stats at Sports-Reference.com
Andrewsarchus | Fossil Wiki | Fandom
It was discovered in June 1923 by Kan Chuen Pao, a member of Andrews' expedition, at a site in the Gobi Desert in Mongolia known as Irdin Manha [variants: Erdeni-Mandal and Erdenemandal ('jeweled mandala')] on the third Asiatic expedition that was led by Andrews and sponsored by the American Museum of Natural History.