Allosaur Al wrote:Well just a couple weeks ago I was visiting my friends in Chicago.
........................
She did manage to escape from the park after dodging an allosaur and a couple raptors. heh It was fun.
OMFG! That is hilarious! I wish I had the PC version, but my family said the PS2 versions good enough and they don't want to waste anymore money. /sad.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=":(" border="0" alt="sad.gif" />
Latest story (in news form):
Jurassic Park Sued For Death Of 30 People And Injuries Of 5 Others
The mass theme park,
Jurassic Park, had to close it's gates today after relatives of injured visitors sued INGen for damages.
The management of the park also lost a case to relatives who claimed the park was dangerous after their loved ones where killed by dinosaurs durin their stay, the manager said to us earlier in an interview
"we didn't know what went wrong" she began
"the park was running fine for the first 6 months. We'd just begun exhibiting our most popular dinosaur, Tyrannosaurus Rex, when things started to turn nasty" she added.
"We knew a storm was comming, and we were prepaired for it. But what we didn't expect was for lightning to strike the fences main power supply." she added, the manger claimed that all the fences were functioning correctly before the storm and investigators who examined the park after the inccident have yet to find out if this is the truth
"we have no idea what happened to the Spinosaurus or how it escaped, all of it's fences where intact" she added.
The manager, Sarah, said it was
"a freak accident" and ruined the parks reputation.
But concidering the deaths of 30 people, it's bound to have been more than just a 'little accident'.
Scientists who studied the comatosed Acrocanthosaurus found that it had a lack of nutrients that where required for it to remain healthy, the lack of these nutrients caused it to become more hungry and eat more food, the scientists beleive the machine that gave the Acrocanthosaurus it's food must have broken down some time before the Jurassic Park inccident and remained un-noticed.
The lack of food will have caused the dinosaur to become unhappy and eventually become enraged, this resulted in it's escape and the cause of several injuries.
"The Acrocanthosaurus we studied was clearly unhealthy" lead scientist Fred Dunnice explained
"it was lacking special nutrients it would normally get from its natural prey, Parasaurolophus."
Jurassic Park was also sued by the NSPCD (National Society Of Protection Of Cruelty To Dinosaurs) for the retiring of 6 Dinosaurs, 5 of them where harmless and perfectly healthy herbivoirs.
"When herbivoirs escape, you take the same action as you do against carnivoirs" the manager said
"especially a whole herd of horned Dinosaurs such as Torosaurus, that could have done far worse than a single Acrocanthosaurus could have done on it's own."
We interviewed some of the visitors to the park, some from before the inccident and some from after.
"It was a terrific experience, all the Dinosaurs looked happy together." said fun-lover, John Khan
"after what I heard about the inccident, I just couldn't beleive it." he added
"then again, I never really saw the carnivoirs. I'm more of a herbivoir lover than carnivoir."
Earlier in the week, we managed to grab an interview with one of the injured visitors to the park.
"It started out as a normal day at the park, then a storm struck the island. We had our umbrellas and raincoats ready, just like our tourguide said." said Trill-seeker, Anne Finch
"I had already visited about 3 months before the inccident, it was such a wonderful park. But then again, there wasn't any breakouts 3 months ago." she added
"I was just in the safari adventure ride when a huge Carcharodontosaurus came out of nowhere and destroyed the car, fortunatly none of us where killed."
The management of Jurassic Park had to pay $185,000 for fatilities, $12,500 for injuries, $50,000 to the NSPCD and a total of $320,000 for building damages.
The park was already due to pay $500,000 for staff and shipping of food/souvanirs this year and so totaling a staggering $1,065,500 in payment.
The parks upkeep alone was a meer $920,000 and so could not afford the payment, so the manager had to sell the park back to InGEN.
"I guess all I can hope for now is that the island is left to develope on its own, without human contact. I have done all I can to make sure it is safe, now it's all up to InGEN and the NSPCD." she finished.
The park was first opened in October 2000 and was shut down in January 2001, InGEN may be working on regaining controle of the park and finding a better manager to run the new park.
But they have yet to win the case in court, which will take place in several weeks time.