
Welcome to Jurassic Park

Jurassic Park is a zoo filled with extinct dinosaurs! Ingen has perfected a cloning process using the extracted blood from mosquitoes preserved in amber to recreate dinosaurs. However, not all DNA samples were intact, so those coded were filled in with various amphibian DNA markers to complete the sequence, allowing for the cloning process to be complete. And there it is… Dinosaurs!
“Life, uh, finds a way.”

But, Jurassic Park is not without its worries, its problems. An noted Chaotitian and Scientist Ian Malcolm points out, “Life breaks free. Life expands to new territories. Painfully, perhaps even dangerously. But life finds a way.”
So it turns out, the dinosaurs of Jurassic Park have found a way, the all female population has begun to breed. This brings a whole new set of dangers to the park. Below you will see a computer data sheet of dinasoars present on the island. Up to this point the computer was programed to look at the expected number of dinosaurs, and the data would be process and all looked good. But in light of new discovery, the computer was reconfigured to search not for the expected amount of dinosaurs, but rather to seek all dinosars present on the island. The data is as follows:

N 38° A.BCD′ W 120° W.XYZ′
A: How many Velociraptors plus how many Pterosaurs were found?
B: How many additional Maiasaurs were discovered by the computer?
C: Keeping track of the dangerous dinosarus. How many Tyranosaurs were found plus how many Dilophosaurs were found?
D: The Triceratops have been good, found what was expected. How many Triceratops are there?
W: How many Procompsagnathids were expected to be found?
X: The population of expected Hypsilophodontids divided by the number of Hadrosaurs found.
Y: At least the Dilophosaurs, as dangerous as they can be, haven’t been breeding. How many Dilophosaurs are there?
Z: By how much did the population of Othnielia grow?
Good luck, and watch out, I hear the T-Rex has broken free.

