Searching for a nontraditional recipe? Here's the fossil version of a turducken.
This 20-foot-long predatory marine reptile Tylosaurus in the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History has its last meal in its stomach: a plesiosaur, or flippered marine reptile. The stomach ALSO contained the bones of the plesiosaur’s last meal of small fishes and invertebrates. These specimens provide a glimpse of an 81 to 85 million-year-old food web.
Also, if your Thanksgiving meal includes turkey, then you're serving up some dinosaur. How? Because birds are dinosaurs. Even their hollow bones, feathers and stiff wrists come from their non-avian dinosaur ancestors.