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Science Dinosaurs Spinosaurus bones hint that the spiny dinosaurs enjoyed water sports. ... a paleontologist at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago and coauthor of the study.
With new bones come new models: Guzun Ion of DI.MA. Dino Makers, a museum sculpture firm in Fossalta di Piave, Italy, molds an updated version of the tail for a life-size Spinosaurus sculpture.
Spinosaurus' habits are challenging to decipher because there are few fossils of the beast. The most complete skeleton, from Egypt, was destroyed in 1944 when the Allies bombed a museum in Munich ...
An exhibition entitled “Spinosaurus: Lost Giant of the Cretaceous” will feature the find at the National Geographic Museum in Washington, D.C., from September 12, 2014 to April 12, 2015.
Spinosaurus, the largest known predatory dinosaur, now has another claim to fame - new fossils reveal it had adaptations to life in the water, which have never been seen in a dinosaur before.
Heavy bombing of the city under British air squadrons in April 1944 led to the destruction of the museum and the precious, at this time singular, Spinosaurus specimen. For over four decades, the ...
Spinosaurus had penguin-like bones, a sign of hunting underwater. The enigmatic predator—and its cousin Baryonyx—are the only known dinosaurs other than birds with this aquatic adaptation.
"Spinosaurus" (The Dino Directory, Natural History Museum) "The Cretaceous Period" ( University of California Museum of Paleontology ) "Spinosaurus Fishes For Prey" ( Planet Dinosaur, BBC ) ...
For decades, those fossils, installed at Munich’s natural history museum, were the only remnants of Spinosaurus. Then Allied forces bombed the city in 1944, destroying much of the museum and the ...
The new Spinosaurus exhibit in Chicago soars over museum-goers at 12 feet above the ground. But there's more to this dinosaur than meets the eye.
Its bite force was equivalent to 6 tons — enough force to rip a car in half. It had 60 serrated teeth that were about eight inches long. A large skull indicated a larger brain and intelligence. Its ...
An exhibition entitled “Spinosaurus: Lost Giant of the Cretaceous” will feature the find at the National Geographic Museum in Washington, D.C., from September 12, 2014 to April 12, 2015.