I lived in the late cretaceous period and ate meat – in other words, I ate dinosaurs like triceratops. Tasty. I had the strongest bite of any animal that ever lived on land! My teeth could be up to 30cm long!
Let's see: Puncture marks on Triceratops hip bones caused by normal feeding bites by T.rex that are equal in force to the attack bites of alligators (and that's a heck lot of force, imagine what it could do in an attack bite). Some hardosaur remains have been found inside T.rex ...
And put in some old favourites, like Tyrannosaurus and Triceratops. Kids love those. If you w! ant to know what 3-6 year olds find so great about dinosaurs, just go to the vote for your favourite dinosaur section of www.zoomdinosaurs.com and read what people that age write in. from ...
or your god. We do not know if it could kill Triceratops, or if it scavenged a lot, or if it ate lawyers off toilets (although we can probably rule out that last one). Why must we be so defensive of it, trying to make it the most perfect killing machine that we want it to be...
The Raptor has a tail in a position that it cound never have in real life. The Spinosaurus has a tail that is waaaaay too short. It's also way too shiny. The Pteranodon (THANKFULLY) has no teeth but (Ok i'm stuck) The Triceratops is too small. ...
meat eaters. But triceratops could have also have used their horns to fight over a female. Brachiosaurus looked a little bit like a girrafe. It had a very long neck and a small head. Its nostrils were on top of its head! It had front legs that were longer than its backlegs! But br...
Or did he draw that himself? (In which case I envy your talent, Bryan) Those are pretty good pictures, although the animal labled as 'Protoceratops' look like a juvenile Triceratops. The cheekless Kritosaurus is very interesting, since it is not the main line of thought at the moment. ...
Alida, Stegosaurus and Triceratops are great dinosaurs, with awesome defenses. Here are the answers to your questions. Triceratops belonged to the ceratopsid family. Ceratopsids were plant-eaters that arose in the late Cretaceous period. Their relatives and ancestors were the psittacosaurs and ...
I'm not so sure about that, Azura. Tyrannosaurid are known only from North America and Asia; so are Ankylosaurids. Other coelurosaur families closely related to the Tyrannosaurs, like Troodontids and Ornithomimids, are known from North America, Asia, and Europe. Close relatives of Ankylosau...