- Ankylosaurus - Wikipedia
Ankylosaurus is a member of the family Ankylosauridae, and its closest relatives appear to be Anodontosaurus and Euoplocephalus Ankylosaurus is thought to have been a slow-moving animal, able to make quick movements when necessary Its broad muzzle indicates it was a non-selective browser
- Ankylosaurus | Size, Diet, Facts | Britannica
Ankylosaurus Ankylosaurus is a genus of four-legged heavily armoured herbivorous dinosaurs that flourished some 70 million to 66 million years ago at the end of the Cretaceous Period
- Ankylosaurus Facts, Habitat, Diet, Fossils, Pictures
The Ankylosaurus belonged to a group of diverse, heavily-armored dinosaurs, the members of which once populated every continent of the world, except Africa, in the late Cretaceous period
- Ankylosaurus: Facts About the Armored Lizard - Live Science
Ankylosaurus means "fused lizard" in Greek, and it was given that name because bones in its skull and other parts of its body were fused, making the dinosaur extremely rugged
- Facts About Ankylosaurus, the Armored Dinosaur - ThoughtCo
Ankylosaurus has lent its name to a widespread family of armored, small-brained, plant-eating dinosaurs, the ankylosaurs, which have been discovered on every continent except Africa
- Ankylosaurus Guide - Dinosaur. org
As a member of the Ankylosauridae family, Ankylosaurus shares its lineage with several related species, such as Euoplocephalus and Ankylosaurus magniventris These related species comparisons highlight significant evolutionary adaptations that facilitated survival in diverse environments
- Ankylosaurus: A Tank-like Herbivore With a Killer Club Tail
Ankylosaurus was a dinosaur with short, squat legs that allowed it to run at about 6 miles per hour - fast, but not fast enough to outrun a large carnivorous predator like Tyrannosaurus rex
- Ankylosaurus - Natural History Museum
Ankylosaurus lived during the Late Cretaceous Period in what is now North America This armoured dinosaur had bony plates covering its body and a heavy club at the end of its tail
|