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Titanosaur - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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By the end of the Cretaceous period, the only sauropods left standing were the titanosaurs--mysterious, armored plant-eaters whose partial skeletons have been found all over the world. Here's a look at how these strange creatures are classified, along with profiles of genuses ranging from Aegyptosaurus to Saltasaurus.
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bra is reported for a giant titanosaur, giving a new insight on neck anatomy of neosauropod dinosaurs ... giant titanosaur, making it possible to compare it ...
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Definition of titanosaur from Webster's New World College Dictionary. Meaning of titanosaur. Pronunciation of titanosaur. Definition of the word titanosaur. Origin of the word titanosaur. ... Dictionary Home » Webster's New World College Dictionary » titanosaur...
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titanosaur n. Any of various plant-eating, amphibious sauropod dinosaurs of the genus Titanosaurus, common during the Cretaceous Period especially ... Despite its centrality to titanosaur systematics and biogeography, a re-evaluation of all Titanosaurus species recognises only five as diagnostic.
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titanosaur , titanosaurian amphibious quadrupedal herbivorous dinosaur with a long thin neck and whiplike tail; of the Cretaceous mostly in the ... Definition: titanosaur, titanosaurian...
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Titanosaur remains are common findings at the paleontological site of Peirópolis in Uberaba. Among those remains, two osteoderms referred to titanosaur sauropods were reported.
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Newly discovered fossil eggs containing embryonic remains from the Late Cretaceous of Argentina provide the first articulated skulls of titanosaur dinosaurs ...
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Titanosaur eggs in France; Titanosaur eggs; Resources ... A great eggstravaganza; The Aude region of southern France was the location of the team's great egg-stravaganza. Pieces of fossilised eggshell had been turning up in a vineyard and the locals wanted to know what had laid the eggs.
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Welcome to another SV-POW! world first: the first ever outing (to my knowledge) of a photo of BMNH R5333, an articulated set of two-and-a-bit titanosaur caudal vertebrae. These vertebrae come from the famous Wessex Formation of the Isle of Wight: they are from the Lower Cretaceous, and specifically from the Barremian.
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