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Researchers looked at the carnivorous Majungasaurus, the apex predator of its ecosystem, and found that they regenerated their teeth between 2 and 13 times faster than other carnivorous dinosaurs ...
Majungasaurus never needed dental work. If it had tooth problems, it just had to wait a couple of months. A new study of the carnivorous dinosaur who lived during the Late Cretaceous period, about ...
Artist impression of Majungasaurus. The dinosaur lived on Madagascar between about 70 and 66 million years ago. iStock "I was very surprised—Majungasaurus replaced its teeth as fast or faster ...
Majungasaurus is one cool theropod. Not only does is have a neat, knobby skull but the numerous remains of this dinosaur allowed for an entire series of papers on it to appear in the Society of ...
A female Majungasaurus as envisaged by the creators of Jurassic Fight Club. Imagine, just for a moment, standing in the middle of a Cretaceous forest 70 million years ago. The sunlight streaming ...
While Majungasaurus, which lived 66 million years ago in Madagascar, was not a close T. rex relative, some lifestyle factors might have caused them to evolve certain similarities.
A fearsome carnivorous dinosaur known for eating its own kind probably wasn't holding onto its meal as it ate: Its arms were far too short and stubby, a new fossil find suggests. Majungasaurus ...
DEERFIELD, IL – 66 million years ago, the fearsome, meat-eating dinosaur Majungasaurus crenatissimus prowled the semi-arid lowlands of Madagascar. Its powerful jaws bristled with bladelike teeth ...
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