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Saurornitholestes ("lizard-bird thief") is a genus of carnivorous dromaeosaurid theropod dinosaur from the late Cretaceous of Canada and the United States (Montana, New Mexico, Alabama, and South Carolina). Two species have been named: Saurornitholestes langstoni in 1978 and Saurornitholestes sullivani in 2015.
The second season of Dinosaur Train began airing on August 22, 2011 with a one-hour special, "Dinosaur Big City." [ 1 ] Other hour-long specials during season two included "Dinosaurs A to Z," which aired May 14, 2012 [ 2 ] and "Dinosaur Train Submarine Adventure," which aired February 18, 2013.
Dinosaur Train is an animated television series aimed at preschoolers ages 3 to 6 and created by Craig Bartlett, who also created Nickelodeon's Hey Arnold!. [2] The series features a Tyrannosaurus rex named Buddy who, together with the rest of his family, who are all Pteranodons, takes the Dinosaur Train to explore the Mesozoic, and have adventures with a variety of dinosaurs.
Another Cryodrakon specimen from Dinosaur Provincial Park has tooth marks and an embedded tooth from the meat-eating dinosaur Saurornitholestes. The bone of a Cryodrakon relative was found in the ...
Diagram illustrating the Early Cretaceous long-necked dinosaur Sauroposeidon with anachronistic humans to scale †Sauroposeidon †Sauroposeidon proteles †Saurornitholestes †Saurornitholestes langstoni – or unidentified comparable form †Sauvagesia – tentative report †Scapanorhynchus †Scapanorhynchus texanus †Scapherpeton ...
The four osteoderms found have three different morphologies, they are plate, bulb, and spine-shaped. This dinosaur would have stretched up to about 15 m (49 ft) from snout to tail. †Argyrosaurus †Argyrosaurus superbus; 70 Ma Lago Colhué Huapi Formation, Argentina †Arkharavia †Arkharavia heterocoelica; 66 Ma Udurchukan Formation, Russia
The holotype fossil is less than one meter long, although this specimen appears to be a juvenile, [1] and it is possible that Bambiraptor is a juvenile Saurornitholestes. [2] It is even suspected that the type specimen is a chimera, based on the fact that "there are elements of three different similarly sized lower legs included in the holotype."
Teeth previously referred to various Campanian dromaeosaurids Saurornitholestes and Dromaeosaurus, frequently found throughout the formation, probably belong to this one species. Evans et al. conclude that there is little evidence for the former two taxa being present in the Hell Creek-Lance assemblages.