enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Dinosaurs: News, features and articles | Live Science

    www.livescience.com/animals/extinct-species/dinosaurs

    Incredibly well preserved dinosaurs at China fossil site were thought to have been buried in huge volcanic eruptions, similar to the Mount Vesuvius that covered the city of Pompeii 2,000 years ago ...

  3. Pterodactyl: Facts about pteranodon and other pterosaurs

    www.livescience.com/24071-pterodactyl-pteranodon-flying-dinosaurs.html

    Terrestrial pterosaurs ate carcasses, baby dinosaurs, lizards, eggs, insects and various other animals. "They were probably fairly active hunters of small prey," Hone said.

  4. Mosasaurus and other mosasaurs of the dinosaur age - Live Science

    www.livescience.com/mosasaurus-mosasaur.html

    The mosasaurs disappeared from the fossil record alongside non-avian dinosaurs 65.5 million years ago, after a giant asteroid crashed into Earth at the end of the Cretaceous period.

  5. A brief history of dinosaurs - Live Science

    www.livescience.com/3945-history-dinosaurs.html

    Famous dinosaurs from this period include T. rex, Triceratops, Spinosaurus and Velociraptor. The largest dinosaurs on record, including Argentinosaurus, date to the Cretaceous. The Cretaceous ...

  6. The 10 coolest dinosaur findings of 2020 - Live Science

    www.livescience.com/dinosaur-discoveries-2020.html

    The 1.2-inch-long baby dinosaur skull (Image credit: Kundrát M. et al. Current Biology (2020); Illustration by Vladimir Rimbala). Before the long-necked titanosaur dinosaurs got huge, they were ...

  7. 10 extraordinary dinosaur discoveries from 2021 | Live Science

    www.livescience.com/dinosaur-discoveries-2021

    The meat-eating dinosaur Allosaurus was a pipsqueak compared with Supersaurus. (Image credit: Supersaurus by Sean Fox; Allosaurus by Gustavo Monroy/Fossil Crates) The longest dinosaur on record is ...

  8. Spinosaurus: The Largest Carnivorous Dinosaur - Live Science

    www.livescience.com/24120-spinosaurus.html

    Spinosaurus was the biggest of all the carnivorous dinosaurs, larger than Tyrannosaurus and Giganotosaurus.It lived during part of the Cretaceous period, about 112 million to 97 million years ago ...

  9. Image Gallery: Dinosaur Fossils - Live Science

    www.livescience.com/11266-dinosaur-fossils.html

    This oviraptor nest—filled with eggs—demonstrates one of the most surprising finds from the Gobi Desert that some dinosaurs cared for their young. Finding Fossils (Image credit: ESO [Courtesy ...

  10. 1st known swimming dinosaur just discovered. And it was...

    www.livescience.com/spinosaurus-first-swimming-dinosaur-discovered.html

    It was a theropod, or part of a group of mostly carnivorous dinosaurs that walked on two legs; and it was around the size of another theropod, Tyrannosaurus rex, with massive projections of its ...

  11. Brachiosaurus: Facts About the Giraffe-like Dinosaur

    www.livescience.com/25024-brachiosaurus.html

    Brachiosaurus was an unusual dinosaur that lived 155.7 million to 150.8 million years ago during the mid- to late Jurassic Period. Specimens have been found primarily in the fossil-rich Morrison ...