The largest predatory dinosaur to walk this earth wasn’t the T. rex. It was Spinosaurus aegyptiacus, a 50-foot long creature with powerful jaws and a solid, spiny sail on its back that dwelled in ...
If you think it sounds incongruous to describe the largest predatory dinosaur yet known as “half duck, half crocodile,” well, correct. But that’s the phrase University of Chicago paleontologist Paul ...
WASHINGTON — The biggest dinosaur predator that ever stalked the Earth was also the weirdest. Scientists announced on Thursday the discovery in Moroccan desert cliffs of new fossil remains of ...
Researchers have discovered that Spinosaurus aegyptiacus had a "paddle-like" tail to propel itself through the water – bolstering the case that this particular species of dinosaur was capable of ...
New fossils found in the Moroccan Sahara shed new light on the menacing dinosaur Spinosaurus aegyptiacus. A study published in Science revealed that 95 million years ago, Spinosaurus aegyptiacus was ...
Spinosaurus was the largest predatory dinosaur ever found. The species was first discovered a century ago, but it is only recently that the true nature of the ancient animal has been understood.
04:15, Thu, Apr 30, 2020 Updated: 13:46, Thu, Apr 30, 2020 The research, documented in the journal Nature, was carried out in Morocco and it provides insight on how 50-foot-long Spinosaurus ...
Researchers have discovered that Spinosaurus aegyptiacus, the terrifying aquatic dinosaur that lived 100 million years ago, had a powerful tail that enabled it to be accustomed to an aquatic lifestyle ...
Dinosaurs ruled the land for millions of years. Now scientists have discovered a fearsome species that could have wreaked havoc in its prehistoric waters. An unusual fossil whose parts were flung ...
The "Spinosaurus: Lost Giant of the Cretaceous" exhibition at the National Geographic Museum in Washington, D.C.Rebecca Hale/National Geographic Uncovered in Saharan Morocco, a new specimen of the ...
Unlike most dinosaurs, it seems that spinosaurs liked the water. This suggestion is based on the analysis of a well-preserved fossil tail of Spinosaurus aegyptiacus, published Wednesday in the journal ...
A group of paleontologists just announced it’s found “unambiguous evidence” suggesting that at least some species of Spinosaurus—a genus of theropod dinosaur that lived during the Cretaceous period in ...
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