- Ankylosaurus - Wikipedia
Ankylosaurus[nb 1] is a genus of armored dinosaur Its fossils have been found in geological formations dating to the very end of the Cretaceous Period, about 68–66 million years ago, in western North America, making it among the last of the non-avian dinosaurs It was named by Barnum Brown in 1908; it is monotypic, containing only A magniventris
- Ankylosaurus | Size, Diet, Facts | Britannica
Ankylosaurus is a genus belonging to a larger group (infraorder Ankylosauria) of related four-legged heavily armoured herbivorous dinosaurs that flourished throughout the Cretaceous Period (145 5 million to 66 million years ago)
- 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
Often compared to an army tank or bus, Ankylosaurus was a heavily armored dinosaur with a large club-like protrusion at the end of its tail Ankylosaurus means "fused lizard" in Greek, and it
- Ankylosaurus Guide - Dinosaur. org
Hailed as a prehistoric powerhouse, the Ankylosaurus captivated scientists with its armor and unique adaptations, revealing secrets that await your exploration
- Facts About Ankylosaurus, the Armored Dinosaur - ThoughtCo
Ankylosaurus was the Cretaceous equivalent of a Sherman tank: low-slung, slow-moving, and covered with thick, nearly impenetrable armor On the following slides, you'll discover 10 fascinating Ankylosaurus facts
- 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 Though it's the most famous member of the ankylosaur group, it's not the best understood Scientists still haven't found an entire Ankylosaurus skeleton
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