With the new Jurassic Park movie raking in millions of dollars at the box office, dinosaurs are once again at the front of public consciousness. But millions of years ago, when there was very little public consciousness, were there dinosaurs running around what is now Illinois?

And, if they were, which ones were here? Did we have Janes and Homers (two dinosaurs famously on display at Rockford's own Burpee Museum of Natural History), or something else?

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"Anyone know where 737 North Main Street is? I'm looking for something called Burpee." (Getty Images)
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"We heard that it's along the river." (Getty Images)
"We heard that it's along the river." (Getty Images)
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The Answer Is A Definite Yes...But No, When It Comes To Illinois Dinosaurs

The Digital Research Library of Illinois History Journal says that no dinosaur bones or fossils have ever been discovered in Illinois. The reason being that Illinois' geologic sediments were being eroded away, rather than actively deposited, during most of the Mesozoic Era, which covered a timespan from 250,000,000 BC to 65,000 BC.

drloihjournal.blogspot.com:

Still, Illinois can boast a significant number of amphibians and invertebrates dating to the Paleozoic Era (541,000,000 BC to 251,900,000), as well as a handful of Pleistocene period (2,600,00 BC to 12,000 BC) pachyderms (Woolly Mammoths, Mastodons and other elephant type mammals). For much of the Mesozoic and Cenozoic Eras (250,000,000 BC to 2,000,000 BC), Illinois was geologically unproductive -- hence the lack of fossils dating from this vast expanse of time.

If it makes you feel any better, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, and Indiana have come up with zilch, zero, nada in the dinosaur department, too.

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Getty Images
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We May Not Have Any Dinosaur Fossils To Find, But We Do Have The Tully Monster

Illinois' Official State Fossil is the Tully Monster, or if you want to be all technical about it, Tullimonstrum. A 300 million year old fossil of a Tully Monster was discovered in 1955 by an amateur collector named Francis Tully in a fossil bed here in Illinois known as the Mazon Creek formation. Tully Monsters have only been found here in Illinois.

Here's what the fossil looks like.

Tully Monster Fossil, Getty Images
Tully Monster Fossil, Getty Images
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And here's what scientists think the Tully Monster may have looked like while alive.

Tully Monster, Getty Images
Tully Monster, Getty Images
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Here's a cute couple, huh? To be honest, it looks like they're complaining about something while swimming. Typical behavior of Tully Monsters.

A pair of Tully Monsters, Getty Images
A pair of Tully Monsters, Getty Images
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WATCH OUT: These are the deadliest animals in the world

LOOK: Here are the pets banned in each state

Because the regulation of exotic animals is left to states, some organizations, including The Humane Society of the United States, advocate for federal, standardized legislation that would ban owning large cats, bears, primates, and large poisonous snakes as pets.

Read on to see which pets are banned in your home state, as well as across the nation.

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