Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals > Dinosaur skeleton: Dueling dinosaurs: full skeletons of Tyrannosaurus Rex on left and stegosaurus in famous battle in Rotunda of Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History. January 2006.
Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals > Dinosaur skeleton: Skeleton of tyrannosaurus rex, a huge meat eating dynosaur of the Cretaceous period that grew over 40 feet long and 20 feet tall, with large sharp teeth and claws. Main entrance hall, Museum of Nature and Science, Denver, Colorado 2005.
Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals > Dinosaur skeleton: Skeleton of tyrannosaurus rex, a huge meat eating dynosaur of the Cretaceous period that grew over 40 feet long and 20 feet tall, with large sharp teeth and claws. Main entrance hall, Museum of Nature and Science, Denver, Colorado 2005.
Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals > Dinosaur skeleton: Deinonychus antirrhopus was a dromaeosaur, meat eating, hunting dinosaurs that lived in the Cretaceous Period 145-65 million years ago. Exhibit Museum of Natural History, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, July 2006.
Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals > Dinosaur fossil skeletons: Allosaurus (standing) was flesh-eating lizard-hipped dinosaur from Jurassic Period collected east of Cleveland, Utah. Exhibit Museum of Natural History, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, February 2006.
Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals > Prehistoric animal skeleton: Short-legged rhinoceros, Teleoceras, Late Miocene, 8 million years ago, Ogallala Group, Kansas. Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History. January 2006.
Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals > Dinosaur skeleton: Ankylosaur, gargoyleosaurus parkpini, was a heavily armored plant eater living 145 million years ago, in the late Jurassic period. Denver Museum of Nature and Science, December 2005.
Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals > Dinosaur skeleton: Mamenchisaurus, with its long neck in particular, takes up the entire length of a very long room with its full length skeleton. This plant eating saurapod grew to 65-85 ft long and lived in the Late Jurassic Period. It is the largest necked dinosaur, and its neck is balanced with a long tail with a small club on its end. It is believed to have lived in herds of up to 100. This particular  skeleton is a cast of a fossil skeleton from China.  Los Angeles County  Museum of Natural History, Los Angeles, California, January 2006.
Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals > Dinosaur skeleton: Diplodocus tongus, a long-necked dinosaur of the late Jurassic Period, 150 million years ago, from the Morrison Formation, Uinta County, Utah. The diplodocus were sauropods, which were plant eaters and the largest land animals ever, thriving worldwide. Denver Museum of Nature and Science, December 2005.
Dinosaur skeleton: Ankylosaur, gargoyleosaurus parkpini, was a heavily armored plant eater living 145 million years ago, in the late Jurassic period. Denver Museum of Nature and Science, December 2005.
Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals > Dinosaur skeleton: Ankylosaur, gargoyleosaurus parkpini, was a heavily armored plant eater living 145 million years ago, in the late Jurassic period. Denver Museum of Nature and Science, December 2005.
Dinosaur skeleton: Ankylosaur, gargoyleosaurus parkpini, was a heavily armored plant eater living 145 million years ago, in the late Jurassic period. Denver Museum of Nature and Science, December 2005.
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