Three years after the incident in San Diego, Dr. Alan Grant has taken up a new study:
the velociraptors on Isla Sorna by SatCam. He spends most of his time on Costa Rica, viewing the animals, and of couse, he
does love going to paleontology parties, and digging up bones, but he loves this even more. Here, he gets to see his favorite
carnivore, the velociraptor. But one day, he counts less raptors on the island than there are supposed to be...
Prologue
Alan
Grant had been studying the raptors on Isla Sorna by SatCam, and it seemed that they wanted to migrate. The raptors and
their hatchlings always ran out onto the shore, and seemed to wait for something. Some raptors ran out into the ocean and
swam, but then came back. And Alan also noticed something: they always went to the shore in a civilized manner. They all
got in a line, including the hatchlings, and went to the shore. And that manner also goes for when they search for food, and
then they split up when they spot something. Grant also had a good count of them: 48. And he knew that that was all of them,
because the raptors were nowhere else, according to SatCam. Each day he recounted...
Alan had found out wonderful things
about these dinosaurs: they did hunt in packs, they were warm-blooded, and he also noticed how they survived; by eating
lysine rich foods. This may seem odd, but besides the herbivores, who also eat lysine rich food, they also eat soy beans and
other lysine rich food. But then one day, he noticed something, something that filled him with horror: the count was down to
39. He looked at all of the other monitors, but he didn't see them anywhere. Then he heard a raptor snarl, and he looked at
the main raptor monitor: seven raptors that were gone came out of the foliage around the beach, and got in their spots. Alan Grant sighed, and left the observation trailer...
Horror
Ellie