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The duck-billed dinosaur Parasaurolophus is best known for the tube that grows out of its head, and the well-preserved skull offers more clues about the crest's evolution.
Fossils collected from Montana and Alberta have helped scientists name a new species of horned dinosaur with wing-like structures on its head. More than 20 feet long and weighing in at more than 2 ...
The first new skull discovered in nearly a century from a rare species of the iconic, tube-crested dinosaur Parasaurolophus was announced today in the journal PeerJ. The exquisite preservation of ...
Paleontologists piece together over 200 bones to discover a Triceratops relative with more horns sticking out of its head than the mutant offspring of a deer and a rhinoceros.
The skull belongs to the iconic, tube-crested dinosaur Parasaurolophus, which lived during the Late Cretaceous Period, about 76.5 million to 73 million years ago.
A previously unknown dinosaur with a remarkably flat head lived around 70 million years ago on an island home to dwarfed prehistoric creatures.
A dog-sized dinosaur may have roamed what is now Big Bend, Texas, some 70 million to 80 million years ago, ramming other paleo-beasts with a bony lump on its head.
"New skull of tube-crested dinosaur reveals evolution of bizarre crest." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 25 January 2021. <www.sciencedaily.com / releases / 2021 / 01 / 210125094343.htm>.
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