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Utahceratops Debut There was a full artistic reconstruction in the 2010 paper that described the dinosaur, but it’s another thing to see the dinosaur’s reconstructed skeleton.
On a "Lost Continent" that once filled the center of the U.S., paleontologists have discovered fossils of two new dinosaur species, relatives of the famed Triceratops.
The Utahceratops has a large horn over the nose and short eye horns that project to the side rather than upward, similar to a bison. Its skull is about 7 feet long, it stood about 6 feet high and ...
The Utahceratops has a large horn over the nose and short eye horns that project to the side rather than upward, similar to a bison. Its skull is about 7 feet long, ...
The Utahceratops has a large horn over the nose and short eye horns that project to the side rather than upward, similar to a bison. Its skull is about 7 feet long, it stood about 6 feet (1.8 ...
An artist's reconstruction of the Utahceratops. Scientists say they've discovered fossils in the southern Utah desert of two new dinosaur species closely related to the Triceratops ...
Utahceratops was 30 percent longer with a massive, 7-foot head with its own array of horns, including two that swoop out sideways like a bison's. Sampson likens it to "a giant rhino with a ...
Scientists said Wednesday they've discovered fossils in the southern Utah desert of two new dinosaur species closely related to the Triceratops, including one with 15 horns on its large head.
Bones from the rib cage and hind legs of the dinosaur, Kosmoceratops richardsoni, were also found, along with two partial skulls, a leg, rib and tail bones of a second species, named Utahceratops ...
Both Kosmoceratops and Utahceratops were plant-eating inhabitants of the 'long lost continent' of Laramidia about 76 million years ago, says Dr Eric Roberts, ...
Blue Wash Utahceratops Quarry (IMAGE) University of Utah. Caption. Researchers works to uncover a new dinosaur discovery in southern Utah. Credit. Utah Museum of Natural History.
The larger of the two dinosaurs, Utahceratops gettyi, had a 7-foot-long (2.3-meter-long) skull, prompting study co-author Mark Loewen of the University of Utah to compare the animal to "a giant ...
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