AMY RYAN: Hello.
I'm Amy.
ELMO: Oh, and Elmo's Elmo.
AMY RYAN: And we're pretending
to be paleontologists.
ELMO: Yeah.
Tell them what a paleontologist
is, Miss Amy.
AMY RYAN: Sure, Elmo.
A paleontologist is a scientist
who looks for and
studies things that lived
a long, long time ago.
ELMO: Yeah.
Oh, oh.
What kind of things that
lived a long, long
time ago, Miss Amy?
AMY RYAN: Well, paleontologists
study plants
that lived a long,
long time ago.
And animals that lived a
long, long time ago.
And even humans that lived
a long, long time ago.
ELMO: What about dinosaurs
that lived a
long, long time ago?
AMY RYAN: Oh, yes.
Paleontologists definitely
study dinosaurs.
ELMO: Oh boy, oh boy!
Well, can paleontologist Elmo
and paleontologist Amy study a
dinosaur right now?
AMY RYAN: Well, sure, Elmo.
Do you have any dinosaur
bones we could study?
ELMO: Well, paleontologist Elmo
has something even better
than bones.
AMY RYAN: What's that?
ELMO: A real dinosaur?
AMY RYAN: Huh?
What?
Whoa.
You are a real dinosaur.
DINOSAUR: Yes I am.
Wanna study me?
AMY RYAN: Of course we do.
We're paleontologists.
DINOSAUR: Ooh--
ooh!
AMY RYAN: What's the matter?
DINOSAUR: You paleontologists
have cold hands.
AMY RYAN: Ooh!
Sorry.
ALL: Paleontologists!
TRAIN: We were counting, finding
the amount then we
counted up to five.
One, two, three, four, five.
COUNTESS: Carson.
Might I have some tea?
CARSON: At once, Mum.
Your tea, Mum.
COUNTESS: Thank you.
Ooh!
Why is the tea not
going in my cup?
CARSON: Perhaps because you
are upside-down, Mum.
