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  2. Carnegie collection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnegie_collection

    The partnership between the Carnegie Museum and Safari Ltd. began in 1987. [4] Production of the Carnegie Collection began in 1988, when Forest Rogers was first contracted to sculpt the models. [2] Some were released in 1988, [5] and all 17 of these initial models were released by 1989, and several models were added to the line each year after ...

  3. Dippy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dippy

    Dippy is a composite Diplodocus skeleton in Pittsburgh's Carnegie Museum of Natural History, and the holotype of the species Diplodocus carnegii.It is considered the most famous single dinosaur skeleton in the world, due to the numerous plaster casts donated by Andrew Carnegie to several major museums around the world at the beginning of the 20th century.

  4. Cearadactylus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cearadactylus

    Cearadactylus is a genus of large anhanguerid pterodactyloid pterosaur from the Romualdo Formation of Brazil, South America. Fossil remains of Cearadactylus dated back to the Albian stage of the Early Cretaceous period, about 112 million years ago. The only known species is C. atrox, described and named in 1985 by Giuseppe Leonardi and Guido ...

  5. Dinosaur classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinosaur_classification

    Classification of dinosaurs. Dinosaur classification began in 1842 when Sir Richard Owen placed Iguanodon, Megalosaurus, and Hylaeosaurus in "a distinct tribe or suborder of Saurian Reptiles, for which I would propose the name of Dinosauria." [1] In 1887 and 1888 Harry Seeley divided dinosaurs into the two orders Saurischia and Ornithischia ...

  6. Borealopelta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borealopelta

    Borealopelta (meaning "Northern shield") is a genus of nodosaurid ankylosaur from the Lower Cretaceous of what is today Alberta, Canada. It contains a single species, B. markmitchelli, named in 2017 by Caleb Brown and colleagues from a well-preserved specimen known as the Suncor nodosaur. Discovered at an oil sands mine north of Fort McMurray ...

  7. Brachiosaurus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brachiosaurus

    Brachiosaurus (/ ˌbrækiəˈsɔːrəs /) is a genus of sauropod dinosaur that lived in North America during the Late Jurassic, about 154 to 150 million years ago. [1] It was first described by American paleontologist Elmer S. Riggs in 1903 from fossils found in the Colorado River valley in western Colorado, United States.

  8. Compsognathus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compsognathus

    Compsognathus (/ kɒmpˈsɒɡnəθəs /; [1] Greek kompsos /κομψός; "elegant", "refined" or "dainty", and gnathos /γνάθος; "jaw") [2] is a genus of small, bipedal, carnivorous theropod dinosaur. Members of its single species Compsognathus longipes could grow to around the size of a chicken. They lived about 150 million years ago ...

  9. Dinosauroid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinosauroid

    A model of the hypothetical dinosauroid, Dinosaur Museum, Dorchester. The dinosauroid is a hypothetical species created by Dale A. Russell in 1982. Russell theorized that if a dinosaur such as Stenonychosaurus had not perished in the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event, its descendants might have evolved to fill the same ecological niche as humans. [1]