https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14772019.2024.2441516
Uriash kadici is a new genus of Titanosaur from late Cretaceous Romania. It was fairly small for a titanosaur, being around 40 feet long, and weighing around 8 tons at max.
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14772019.2024.2441516
Uriash kadici is a new genus of Titanosaur from late Cretaceous Romania. It was fairly small for a titanosaur, being around 40 feet long, and weighing around 8 tons at max.
Hey y'all, I just thought I'd gave the fellow Bruhathkayosaurus som thickness since the original looks a bit thin.
My Edited Version:
Here's the original(supposedly the restoration) from Ansh Saxena:
DISCLAIMER: This post isn't meant to be an accurate representation of what Bruhath looks like since its skeletal remains incomplete anyway.
So as of writing this, the official Dino Dan channel just uploaded a trailer for some cruddy MetaQuest VR game called DinoHab. This prolly shouldn’t count for the purposes of this series, it wasn’t even made by the same company, but it’s on their channel, and it’s about dinosaurs, so f*** it, let’s do it.
I can’t really say much about the Tricera, it’s pretty generic. The color variants are decent, but nothing notable.
It really bothers me how official sources just call this a “titanosaur”, that’s very unspecific. The head is pretty laughable and a little ugly. The colorations on the other hand is actually pretty solid, the white with dark splotches of this, or the bluish colors of one the alts would look splendid on a proper model.
There’s nothing to say about the Rex, so instead I’m gonna complain about how the baby looks more like a gross little T.Rex goblin creature than an actual baby dinosaur.
Anywaysies, check out the full series if you want, thanks for reading, and goodbye.
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One:
Made with Animal Revolt Battle Simulator, set in the Late Jurassic, a herd of Brachiosaurs marches along the Morrison Formation, with a Marshosaurus looking on.
Two:
Also in ARBS but with edits, Ellie (Dinosaur Britain) witnesses an abelisaur and a titanosaur duking it out.
Three (odd one out):
Katie Butler (teenaged daughter of the Butler family from Hanna-Barbera’s Valley of the Dinosaurs) redesigned to have undamaged clothing, her shirt sleeves are now full, she’s wearing a jacket, and she also has brown heeled boots.
The Thunder King (the scientific name Colossocollurex Styrax means "Colossal-Necked King with Spikes"). The Thunder King is a Titanosaur, possibly related to Dreadnoughtus or something. This is less realistic than some of my previous dinosaurs for this movie, but it's also more creative, being a Titanosaur with a tail club.
At 28 meters (about 92 feet) in length and over 70 tons, this is the largest animal in the movie. They are so big that most predators don't even risk hunting them unless they absolutely need to. Seriously look at its size compared to a Blue Whale!
They're about the same length, but a Thunder King is lighter (closer in size to a large Alamosaurus or a small Argentinosaurus than a Blue Whale) because an animal as big as a blue whale cannot function on land.
The article mainly focuses on aquatic animals, but also shows us what might have happened if azhdarchids and titanosaurs didn't go extinct. Enjoy.
http://www.sivatherium.narod.ru/articles/nel_arkh/bttrf_en.htm
Also, I noticed while creating tags for this post that we need a page for Azhdarchidae.
Most articles I'm seeing are about a month and a half old, but this was technically discovered in 2018, so here's hoping this isn't a duplicate post. Just thought it was cool af tbh.
An agate was mistakenly placed into the Natural History Museums' mineralogy collection but is now considered a 67 million-year-old titanosaur egg.
This little specimen was found in a volcanic plain and was smothered in lava after being laid. Evidence from the thin outer shell indicates that it was once pressed against other eggs (probably in a nest) and buried under volcanic rock before it was encased in lava. Burying their eggs was a nesting behavior consistent with Titanosaurs since they could use the geothermal heat to incubate their eggs, this is also common among modern turtles, crocodiles, and
Once the embryo had died, over the course of millions of years silica-rich water seeped into the egg, crystalizing into the pinkish agate pictured above.
It wasn't until Robin Hansen, a mineral curator at the Natural History Museum, visited a mineral show in 2018 that he realized the agate stored at the museum looked pretty similar to another agatized dinosaur egg that was on display.
Thoughts? I love learning about dinosaur nesting habits tbh, it's the coolest thing.
By the end of the Mesozoic, were the titanosaurs the only sauropods left? Just asking, as it looks like only titanosaurs by that time period.
@Cooner21 @Rexyisdebest @Mediterranean Mapper @TotallynotaHellionWarden @CreepyLegos
Description: Bruhathkayosaurus is an absolutely colossal titanosaurian sauropod from the Kallemedu formation in India. It was the largest creature to ever walk the earth, weighing 5 tons more than the 85-ton Argentinosaurus. Don't believe us? Look at the size comparison.
Extra info: Bruhathkayosaurus don't live in regular herds like a lot of sauropods, instead they live in family groups lead by the oldest female and her sisters while being defended by the adult bulls of the group. During the mating season, family groups will gather around an open field, where males will fight for mating permission from females. The fighting is basically what you'd expect, biting of the neck and head, wrestling and kicking, blows from the tail and stuff like that. When threatened, the females will circle around the young while the males charge at the threat to scare it away, and if that doesn't work, to kill it by kicking and trampling and stomping it to death. We learned this the hard way when a power-outage caused the power in the South American section to go out, resulting a gate malfunction in the Mapusaurus enclosure, giving the pack of 14 a good 7 minutes to break out and run to the Bruhathkayosaurus enclosure, which they broke into via a wall still weak after being damaged during the mating season. They attacked a family group of Bruhathkayosaurus, with 4 pack members distracting the bulls while the others targeted the young. However, due to the defense circle, all it resulted in was an adult female getting killed by the Mapusaurus. However, it was not just the Bruhathkayosaurus that were going to die that night, as while one of the attacking Mapusaurus wasn't looking, one of the males charged from the side, reared up, and proceeded to crush the Mapusaurus to death. The Mapusaurus then fled the enclosure and tried to escape through the park's entry gate, but by then recontainment forces had been expecting them and proceeded to tranquilize and relocate the now pack of 13. Meanwhile, the Bruhathkayosaurus preformed what is known as a "sauropod vigil", where members of a sauropod herd or family stand by the corpse of their loved one while not eating or drinking for the whole day. Alexis thatcher, head of sauropod care and Eli fowler, head of carnivorous therapod care both agree that the incident was a horrible tragedy that, with a good increase in security, should hopefully never happen again.
UPDATE ON SILLOSUCHUS AND SALTRIOVENATOR INCIDENT:
As we speak, Recontainment forces are rallying local professional hunters and trappers to assist in the recontainment of the escaped Sillosuchus. We have started a fundraiser to help raise money for this cause, your donations are much appreciated. Money also goes into the recontainment of the Saltriovenator, which we have now been made aware has committed its first attack against human's. About a day ago, the Saltriovenator attacked a small family by literally charging through the family's cabin wall. The family only got injured by the wood that flew in their direction when the Saltriovenator broke in. The family's mother managed to deter the Saltriovenator by firing a shotgun at the Saltriovenator and, although she missed, scaring it off. The father of the family has pointed out that the Saltriovenator appeared starved, probably only attacking the family out of starvation.
We will keep you updated on the incident.
(Goddamn this took a long time to write)
Here are my calcualtions
Broome=heavy. Heavy=dead cuz square cube law
Broome=light, light=not dead
Now the image below may shock you, you might ask, Sheepthing2, I never knew you were such a talented artist.
You should have >:(((((
Now, this my debut into the world of Paleoart
Scroll
Voila
My finest work yet
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Titanosaur nesting site in Brazil
And plants
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ouled_Abdoun_Basin
It’s a marine formation in Morroco,it was home to some cool animals like the Crocodile Dryosaurus,the snake Paleophis,the dinosaurs Ajnabia(The first hadrosaur from Africa,as well as one of the smallest),Chenanisaurus,Titanosauria,the turtle Ocepechelon,the mosasaurs Globidens,Mosasaurus and Prognathodon.
Other animals are the pterosaurs Tethydraco and possibly Arambourgina,the Shark Squalicorax and finally,the short headed Plesiosaur Zarafasaura,it’s really cool!