13 Biggest Ceratopsian Dinosaurs Ever Found
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- Опубликовано: 5 июл 2024
- The Ceratopsian size comparison pictures in the video belongs to Cisiopurple:
www.deviantart.com/cisiopurpl...
Ceratopsia refers to a taxonomic group of herbivorous dinosaurs characterised by their beaked morphology. These dinosaurs flourished in the regions that today encompass North America, Europe, and Asia during the Cretaceous Period. It is worth noting that earlier progenitor species of Ceratopsia existed during the Jurassic Period. The ceratopsian species identified as the earliest known specimen existed over the time period ranging from approximately 161.2 to 155.7 million years ago. Triceratops prorsus, the final known species of ceratopsian, underwent extinction during the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction event approximately 66 million years in the past.
The Triceratops holds the distinction of being the most widely recognised ceratopsian among the general populace. In the realm of ceratopsian nomenclature, it is customary for genus designations to conclude with the suffix "-ceratops"; nevertheless, it is worth noting that this convention is not universally adhered to. One of the initial designated genera was Ceratops itself, which bestowed its name upon the assemblage. However, it is presently regarded as a nomen dubium due to the absence of unique identifying features in its fossilised remains that are not also present in other ceratopsians. - Развлечения
I always learn something new from your videos! ❤
Ojoceratops is an herbivore not a carnivore...
Cool vid though love to see Pentaceratops and Eotrike get some love
Also some have considered that Ojoceratops is synonymous with Triceratops and a possible Mexican Triceratops species
Amazing
Wonder *if* at least the triceratops were still around, could be ridden the way one of the characters did in 1999's TV series The Lost World, or like how a character was depicted doing on the cover of the comic book Jurassic Park Dangerous Games #4. Love to give that a try *if* possible.
Interesting that they were among the last before extinction.
Penamtaceratopsq left the chat
What about pachyrhinosaur
Number 7 what you described is pachyrhinosaurus
no the pachyrhino hase no horn on the beak. only between the eyes, not on the beak.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centrosaurinae
@@knsstudio0 they didn’t show it with a horn
@@Thatonedude-sy7fr horne
I don't recall Coahuilaceratops being an omnivore.
maybe new specimen with revealing stomach contents?
@@kingmasterlord I've been thinking that for the therizinosaurs.