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Brachiosaurus

Brachiosaurus, whose name signifies "arm reptile," was the giraffe dinosaur of the Jurassic. With its long neck (very nearly 30 feet in length) and tall front legs, this goliath sauropod could nip new shoots from the highest points of trees in excess of 40 feet over the ground.  in case Brachiosaurus were alive today, it could look into fourth story windows. This is the biggest sauropod known from almost complete skeletons. For some scientistss, this is the boss for size. Gauging 50 tons, probably as much as seven elephants, Brachiosaurus was a gigantic dinosaur that needed to take care of continually. The front legs were taller than the back legs, and the tail was generally short.  Brachiosaurus was weighty toward the front and light in the back. the rib confine was gigantic, but since the legs were so tall, the stomach was so distant the  ground that a stegosaurus could stroll under it. The long neck and front legs look like the body of a giraffe, and it is concei

Tyrannosaurus

Paleontologists were shocked when they unearthed a near complete skeleton of Tyrannosaurus in 1092. By its bones alone, the scientists knew they had found of all time. The size of an adult person" is its head. This Tyrannosaurus dinosaur body could extend the entire width of a tennis court. T-Rex Up to seven tons of muscle and other tissues filled out the rest of its sturdy frame. " These dinosaurs must have frightened all the other dinosaurs of the late Cretaceous that it was a terrible carnivore."
Evidence supports Tyrannosaurus' killer reputation A Triceratops hipbone, for example, was found covered in Tyrannosaurus bite Mark's, including a large chunk of missing bone. This suggests that the affected dinosaur can hunt in each area with its 8-inch-long cone-shaped, razor-sharp teeth. Recent studies also suggest that today's lions formidable predators in their own right only have one third the baiting force of the Late Cretaceous predator. Dinosaur kept it's back level, held its tail still and then moved forward with a purposeful March. Normally at least 11 different muscle groups on its legs allowed this natural athlete to pull its heavy body with a proud, erect forward movement. At times Tyrannosaurus likely sprinted over short distance at speed of up 20 miles per hour, which is very close to speed run by human Olympians. Each pillar shaped hind limb ended with a four toed foot that had heavy claws for grasping prey and for traction. The shortest forearms of the tyrannosaurus seem weak, but the tyrannosaurus can press two adult humans with one hand at a time. Its hands also featured two fingers capped off by two ultra sharp claws.



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