Posts

Showing posts from June, 2021

Featured Post

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

Apatosaurus

Image
 Apatosaurus moved constantly feeding day and night when they walked, because each adult weighed as much as five adult elephants. the idea of a thundering walker gave Brontosaurus its name, which means "thunderlizard." the name Apatosaurus was used first for this dinosaur, so it  is the correct name," But the literal meaning of its name, "deceitful reptile," is difficult to apply to this giant. with as shoulder height of 12 feet,  a length of about 70 feet, and a weight of 30 tone, this peaceful herbivore could neither hide nor disappear into the background. like its close relatives Diplodocus, Barosaurus, and Supersaurus, this sauropod had a small bead; a long slender neck; and a deep, heavy midsection. it  also had legs built like pillars and a long heavy tail that ended in a slender whip Apatosaurus possessed elephant like "toes "at the bottom of hefty, thick pillar-shaped limbs. A long, whipping tail held together with 82 bones extended from the d

Popular posts from this blog

Brachylophosaurus

Troodon formosus

Discovering dinosaur