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Your favorite Dinos


OtterLord

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Just post the Dinosaurs you like most, Place pictures and info, basically just talk about your favorite Dinosaurs! :w00t:

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Unenlagia comahuensis

"The most bird-like dinosaur ever discovered is the 90-million-year-old Unenlagia comahuensis, a flightless, 4-foot tall, 7.5-foot-long carnivore. It is the size of an ostrich, but shaped like Velociraptor"

Sorry, I couldn't find a more menacing picture of the "Halb Vogel",

or half-bird.

http://leute.server.de/frankmuster/U/Unenlagia1.jpg

Edited by Yelekiah
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Best picture of the Unenlagia comahuensis that I could find. Even if it is a sketch.

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Raptor time!

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Meaning of Name Speedy Thief

Size 6 feet long, and 3 feet tall

Weight about 15 to 33 pounds

Features 30 very sharp, curved teeth in a long, flat snout, an s-shaped neck long thin legs arms with three-fingered clawed hands and four-toed clawed feet

Lived Late Cretaeceous Period

Diet meat eater

Locomotion run up to roughly 40 mph

Where Found Mongolia, Russia, and China

Don'cha wish your Dino was cool like mine, well don'cha?

Edited by nick_fury
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lol, thank you, Otterlord. They were supposed to be real smart like raptors.

(thinks back to Jurassic Park)

I found some more info from a site someone showed me.

"The structure of the forelimb suggests that the avian mode of the forelimb folding, and the extensive forelimb elevation necesssary for powered, flapping flight, was already present in cursorial, non-flying theropod dinosaurs. Unenlagia does resemble Archaeopteryx in important details of its forelimb and hip. Foremost among these is the structure of the shoulder joint, which indicates that the animal could hold its arm directly outward, like a bird, as well as fold it against its body. "

Neat stuff about the correlation between dinos and birds.

Edited by Yelekiah
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GIANT GROUND SLOTH

Megatherium (pronounced MEG-ah-THEER-ee-um) was the largest giant ground sloth; its name means "great beast." Megatherium was a huge, bulky, slow-moving herbivore (plant-eater) with peg-like teeth, powerful jaws, and a thick, short tail. This ice-age mammal had three hook-like claws on each hand. It was primarily a quadruped (walked on four legs). It may have eaten leaves from the tops of trees while standing upright on its hind legs, using its tail to balance. Megatherium was the size of an elephant. It lived during the Pleistocene epoch in what is now South America, going extinct about 11,000 years ago. It was about 20 feet (6 m) long and weighed roughly 3-4 tons. Megatherium was named by R. Owen in 1856; the first Megatherium fossil was found in Brazil in 1789. (Cohort (many grouped orders) Edentata, Family Megatheriidae, Genus Megatherium)

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Albertosaurus was a theropod from the late Cretaceous period at the end of the Mesozoic Era.

The Theropods were fast, two-legged carnivores (animal eaters) with short arms. The following are Theropod characteristics:

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  • Speed and agility
  • Carnivorous diet
  • Sharp, slicing teeth and well-developed jaw muscles
  • Bipedal walk
  • Strong legs with bird-like, three-toed, clawed feet
  • Hollow bones (like birds).

Length: 28 feet (8.5 m)
Height: 10 feet (3 m)
Weight: 2.5 tons (2300 kilos)
Speed: 40 km/hr

This fleetness, combined with obvious physical strength, would have made Albertosaurus a fierce hunter, perhaps even more so than the more massive Tyrannosaurus rex.
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Smaller but longer-limbed than Tyrannosaurus rex, Albertosaurus would have been a mobile hunter, although it probably fed on the carcasses of already dead animals as well.

Albertosaurus bones were among the earliest dinosaur remains collected in Alberta. A skull found by J.B. Tyrrell in 1884 was the first important dinosaur fossil to be discovered along the Red Deer River. It was named in 1905, the same year that Alberta became a province. Since then, many Albertosaurus fossils have been discovered. the smallest documented Albertosaurus, a juvenile less than a quarter of the size of a full grown adult, was collected from Sandy Point on the South Saskatchewan River in 1986.

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Im going to pick one out of left field here ...

Dimetrodon.

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Dimetrodon's most distinctive characteristic is the spectacular sail on its back. The sail was probably used to regulate body temperature; the surface area would allow it to warm up or cool off more efficiently. It may also have been used in mating rituals and to ward off other predators. The sail was supported by neural spines, each one sprouting from an individual vertebra.

Dimetrodon was a dominant carnivore, the largest of its day. It grew to up to 3 meters in length. Dimetrodon means "two-measures teeth"; it is so named because it had a large skull with two different types of teeth (shearing teeth and sharp canine teeth), as opposed to the dinosaurs. It walked on four side-sprawling legs and had a large tail.

Dimetrodon was a member of a group of animals we call synapsids. Just behind the eye socket in this skull is an opening, called the synapsid opening. Its purpose is not known for certain, but it may have been a passage for jaw muscles that helped Dimetrodon and other synapsids chew.

One other group of animals has this synapsid opening -- mammals. So the 280-million-year-old Dimetrodon is actually one of your early relatives, and another step on the path to your own evolutionary branching point.

^_^

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Spinosaurus Aegyptus is my favorite, and even before it was made famous by the Jurassic park III film. Maybe someone else can post a good pic.

Its teeth are very common and you can buy them on ebay, but complete skeletons are extremely rare. This seems to be the biggest (longest) carnivorous dinosaur ever found, and said to be 60 feet in length. Unforunately, the bones of this monster were destroyed in Berlin during WWII. Whereas most therpods dinosaurs have a similar general appearance, Spinosaur is unique in its great sail fin, fairly large forearms, and long, crocodile like snout.

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I love them all! They're so amazing to me, and I'm glad to see this forum. I have a special place for the really huge long necked sauropods, and also for the giant meat eaters like the T-Rex. But all the smaller ones are so unique and fascinating too.

Incidentally, there's some beautiful dino drawings on this page (it's the place where I got my current avatar image): Dino Art

Edited by Rare and Unusual Human Creature
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I've always been fond of Velociraptors because of how cool they looked and how intelligent they were.

Info about 'em.

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Elasmotherium

[Categories: Rhinos, Prehistoric mammals]

The Giant Unicorn (Elasmotherium sibiricus) was a  (Massive powerful herbivorous odd-toed ungulate of southeast Asia and Africa having very thick skin and one or two horns on the snout) rhinoceros which stood two meters high and six meters long, with a single two-meter-long horn in the forehead. Its habitat was the steppes south of the range of the  (Extinct thick-haired species of arctic regions) Woolly Rhinoceros. It may have weighed up to 5 tonnes. Its legs were longer than those of other rhinos and were designed for galloping, giving it a horse-like gait. It was probably a fast runner, in spite of its size. Its teeth were similar to those of horses, and it probably grazed low herbs.

Due to a lack of fossils from any date later than 10,000 years ago, the Giant Unicorn is usually regarded to have become extinct at that time, together with many other species of  (Click link for more info and facts about megafauna) megafauna.

Historical witnesses?

Elasmotherium probably died out in prehistoric times.

However, according to the  (Click link for more info and facts about Nordisk familjebok) Nordisk familjebok and to space scientist  (Click link for more info and facts about Willy Ley) Willy Ley, the animal may have survived long enough to be remembered in the legends of the  (A member of the Tungus speaking people of Mongolian race who are a nomadic people widely spread over eastern Siberia; related to the Manchu) Evenk people of  (A federation in northeastern Europe and northern Asia; formerly Soviet Russia; since 1991 an independent state) Russia as a huge black bull with a single horn in the forehead.

There is also a testimony by the medieval traveller  (Click link for more info and facts about Ibn Fadlan) Ibn Fadlan, who is usually considered a reliable source, which indicates that Elasmotherium may have survived into historical times. (Click link for more info and facts about Ibn Fadlan) Ibn Fadlan's account states:

There is nearby a wide steppe, and there dwells, it is told, an animal smaller than a camel, but taller than a bull. Its head is the head of a ram, and its tail is a bull’s tail. Its body is that of a mule and its hooves are like those of a bull. In the middle of its head it has a horn, thick and round, and as the horn goes higher, it narrows (to an end), until it is like a spearhead. Some of these horns grow to three or five ells, depending on the size of the animal. It thrives on the leaves of trees, which are excellent greenery. Whenever it sees a rider, it approaches and if the rider has a fast horse, the horse tries to escape by running fast, and if the beast overtakes them, it picks the rider out of the saddle with its horn, and tosses him in the air, and meets him with the point of the horn, and continues doing so until the rider dies. But it will not harm or hurt the horse in any way or manner.

The locals seek it in the steppe and in the forest until they can kill it. It is done so: they climb the tall trees between which the animal passes. It requires several bowmen with poisoned arrows; and when the beast is in between them, they shoot and wound it unto its death. And indeed I have seen three big bowls shaped like Yemen seashells, that the king has, and he told me that they are made out of that animal’s horn.

Some have argued that the survival of Elasmotherium into historical times may be the source of the  (An imaginary creature represented as a white horse with a long horn growing from its forehead) unicorn myth, as the animal's description fits well with the  (An empire in southern Asia created by Cyrus the Great in the 6th century BC and destroyed by Alexander the Great in the 4th century BC) Persian karkadann unicorn, and the  (Any of the Sino-Tibetan languages spoken in China; regarded as dialects of a single language (even though they are mutually unintelligible) because they share an ideographic writing system) Chinese zhi unicorn.

[http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/e/el/elasmotherium.htm]

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Since my fav, Unenlagia, has already been covered i'll do...

General Info

Name: Therizinosaurus (Scythe lizard)

Classification: Theropoda; Coelurosauria; Therizinosauridea

Length: Unknown, maybe up to 36 feet (11 m)

Weight: Up to 6 tons.

Hieght: Around twice that of a modern adult human.

Lived: Late Cretaceous perios, 70-65 million years ago.

Fossils

First found: 1948. Thought to be remains of giant turtle. Teeth, incomplete forlimbs, a large claw, and some hind limb/foot fragments.

Fossils discovered in: Mongolian desert and northern China.

Best Specimin: Enormous arm and sholder blade in central Mongolia.

Facts

- So strange that it was placed in it's own group.

- Weird structure may have made Therizinosaurus have looked like it was sitting down when it's back was straight.

- 2-foot claws (.06 m) on 8 foot (2.5 m) arms. Very strong arm and shoulder muscles.

- Most likely used claws to strip tree bark.

- May have had proto-feathers.

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Giganotosaurus- a truly awesome giant carnivore from Argentina that is slightly bigger than the Tyrannosaurus rex

http://home.att.net/~sl.schofield3/dinosau...ntinosaurus.jpg

http://www.madzia.cz/pictures/giganotosaurus.jpg

Carnotaurus- how can you not love a "carnivororous Bull"-a theropod with horns?

Gojirasaurus Qauyi- a mid-size late Triassic Ceratosaur named after Godzilla(Godzilla's name in Japan in Gojira) about 5.5 meters long. Even though it's in the Ceratosaur family, it looks like a giant Coelophysis and is supposedly closely related to Dilophosaurus, and it is also one of the first large sized carnivores to have evolved. In the actual godzilla films, before the real Gojirasaurus was discoved, the filmmakers actually invented their own species of Gojirasaurus as the dinosaur that Godzilla mutated from in the 1991 movie GODZILLA VS KING GHIDORAH. The filmic Gojirasaurus was quite larger than the real thing however- something like 12 meters tall and 25 meters long!

http://www.palaeos.com/Mesozoic/Triassic/Norian.5.htm[/img]

Spinosaurus- very cool dinosaur, even if they weren't as super powerful as depicted in JURASSIC PARK 3. There's no way it could kill a T. Rex-the Spino's jaws and teeth were far too weak for that kind of fighting-they ate fish, not large land animals like T.Rex!

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Brontosaurus

Brontosaurus excelsus

Pronounced:Bron - toe - Sore - us

Diet:Herbivore (Plant-Eater)

Name Means:"Thunder Lizard"

Length:76 feet (23 m)

Height:25 feet (8 m)

Weight:33 tons (30,000 kilos)

Time:Late Jurassic - 155 MYA

Location:SW United States

Brontosaurus is one of the most well known dinosaurs, but did it really exist? At this point, scientists can't agree on whether Brontosaurus actually existed, as the original type specimen was actually a combination of two different dinosaurs - an Apatosaurus body and a Camarasaurus head. Currently, Brontosaurus is not a valid species, but that may change.

When it was discovered that the head of Camarasaurus was placed on the body of Apatosaurus and called Brontosaurus, most people thought that was the end of this dinosaur that had become an icon for dinosaur fans from the late 19th century through the 1970s. That may not be the case, however, as Dr. Robert Bakker is developing evidence that supports his claim that Brontosaurus should still be recognized as a real dinosaur. He asserts that it was a huge, long-necked plant eater that deserved its name, which means Thunder Lizard.

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ANKYLOSAURUS(ang-KYL-o-sawr-us) "Stiffened Lizard" (Greek ankylo = stiffen = sauros = lizard, because of its stiffened dermal armor) Sometimes mistakenly called EUOPLOCEPHALUS.

One of the largest and best known of the ANKYLOSAURS. The body, head, and TAIL of this "REPTILIAN tank" were covered with bony plates set close together in thick, leathery SKIN. A row of short SPIKES protected each side of the body. The TAIL was short and thick and ended in a bony club. This peaceful plant eater lived in western North America during the CRETACEOUS PERIOD. It was 25 feet (7.5 m) long, 6 feet (1.8 m) wide, and over 4 feet (1.2 m) tall. It weighed about 5 tons (4.5 metric tons). Ankylosaurus was one of the very last kind of dinosaurs to die out. It is known from fairly complete material found in Montana.

Ankylosaurus is sometimes called Euoplocephalus, but it is now believed that these were two different animals.

Classification: Ankylosauridae, Ankylosauria, Ornithischia

post-20946-1128050115_thumb.jpg

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Tyrannosaurus

Tyrannosaurus rex

Pronounced: tie-Ran-o-Saw-rus

Diet: Carnivore (Meat-Eater)

Name Means: "tyrant lizard"

Length: 40 feet (13 m)

Height: 16 feet (5 m)

Weight: 6 tons (6,000 kilos)

Time: Late Cretaceous - 67 MYA

Probably the most famous of all dinosaurs, T. rex was probably the fiercest meat eater that ever lived. At more than 40 feet tall, it was huge and had the most powerful head of any dinosaur. It also had the biggest teeth of any dinosaur - teeth that were not only sharp and cutting edged, but also thick and strong, capable of crushing bones. After many millions of years of evolution, nature arrived at T. rex, an almost perfect killing machine.

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YAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I LOVE DINOS, I AM SO HAPPY TO SEE THIS THREAD.

awwww, someone already took Therizinosaurus...

I love all of them..but i'll pick a substitute for Therizinosaurus (my fav)

Probably UTAHRAPTOR!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Saurophaganax

Amargasaurus

and Seismosaurus

Im too lazy to type all the info, so here is the link for all of them...theyre in alphabetical order.

DINOSAURS RULE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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I loved the Jurassic Park movies when I was a kid (still do, though I haven't seen the third for some reason), and it's been raptors for me ever since. I also like dinos with interesting head shapes, such as dilophosaurus, allosaurus and parasaurolophus.

Velociraptor

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Spinosaurus Aegyptus is my favorite indefinitely. About.com's Paranormal section has a thing about dinosaurs, and somewhere in there it said in the 70s a giant hole opened up near a mine and a baby Spiney came out :P Yeah right. In all seriousness, I first started to love Spinosaurus Aegyptus when I saw it in JP3... It's got the spine, the long arms, the croco head, and it's just awesome!

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too bad it specialized in fish *hides*

jk

i thought the scientific name was Spinosaurus Aegyptiacus?

Edited by frogfish
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