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329 image(s) · 11 News

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Taxa Acheroraptor

Cast of the known material of Acheroraptor, on display at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History's exhibit The Last American Dinosaurs.

museum cast Acheroraptor
Taxa Anchiornis

Fossil specimen of Anchiornis huxleyi on display at the Beijing Museum of Natural History.

museum fossil specimen Anchiornis
Taxa Oviraptor

Title: The dinosaur book : the ruling reptiles and their relatives Identifier: bookruli00colb (find matches) Year: 1951 (1950s) Authors: Colbert, Edwin H. (Edwin Harris), 1905-2001; Knight, Charles Robert, 1874-1953; American Museum of Natural History Subjects: Dinosaurs; Reptiles, Fossil Publisher: New York : Published for the American Museum of Natural History by McGraw-Hill Contributing Library: American Museum of Natural History Library Digitizing Sponsor: IMLS / LSTA / METRO View Book Page: Book Viewer About This Book: Catalog Entry View All Images: All Images From Book Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book. Text Appearing Before Image: ' Text Appearing After Image: bone A typical example of the parts usually found fossilized: portions of the skeleton of a small dinosaur from Mongolia A.M.N.H. photographs One of the rarest fossils: a dino- saur egg over 60 million years old, compared with a hen's egg (left) and an alligator egg (right) Note About Images Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.

bone museum Mongolia fossil +3
Taxa Fenestrosaurus

Title: The dinosaur book : the ruling reptiles and their relatives Identifier: bookruli00colb (find matches) Year: 1951 (1950s) Authors: Colbert, Edwin H. (Edwin Harris), 1905-2001; Knight, Charles Robert, 1874-1953; American Museum of Natural History Subjects: Dinosaurs; Reptiles, Fossil Publisher: New York : Published for the American Museum of Natural History by McGraw-Hill Contributing Library: American Museum of Natural History Library Digitizing Sponsor: IMLS / LSTA / METRO View Book Page: Book Viewer About This Book: Catalog Entry View All Images: All Images From Book Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book. Text Appearing Before Image: ' Text Appearing After Image: bone A typical example of the parts usually found fossilized: portions of the skeleton of a small dinosaur from Mongolia A.M.N.H. photographs One of the rarest fossils: a dino- saur egg over 60 million years old, compared with a hen's egg (left) and an alligator egg (right) Note About Images Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.

bone museum Mongolia fossil +3
Taxa Nemegtomaia

Skeleton identified as Nemegtomaia by Greg Funston.[1] Central Museum of Mongolian Dinosaurs, Ulaanbaatar. Complete indexed photo collection at WorldHistoryPics.com.

museum Nemegtomaia skeleton
Taxa Teratophoneus

Teratophoneus curriei, adult (left) and juvenile (right), on display at the Natural History Museum of Utah, Salt Lake City.

museum juvenile Teratophoneus
Taxa Archaeornithomimus

Mounted specimen of Archaeornithomimus asiaticus on display at the Paleozoological Museum of China.

museum China specimen Archaeornithomimus
Taxa Einiosaurus

Reconstructed skull of Einiosaurus procurvicornis on display at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.

museum Einiosaurus skull
Taxa Montanoceratops

Montanoceratops cerorhynchus (Brown & Schlaikjer, 1942) - fossil ceratopsian dinosaur skeleton from the Cretaceous of Montana, USA. (MOR 542, Museum of the Rockies, Bozeman, Montana, USA) The species name is sometimes incorrectly spelled "cerorhynchos". The original publication spells it "cerorhynchus". The genus name is sometimes incorrectly spelled "Montanaceratops". Ceratopsians are the "horned dinosaurs". They were large, quadrupedal, herbivorous dinosaurs having a beaked skull and a frill - an extension of bone behind the skull that partially covered the neck. Ceratopsian dinosaurs are known from the Jurassic and Cretaceous. The last members of the group died out at the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary, 65 million years ago. This is a partial skeleton of a juvenile Montanoceratops, a ceratopsian from the near-latest Cretaceous of western North America. This type of ceratopsian lacked facial horns. From exhibit signage: Sixty-eight million years ago, when the horned dinosaurs Triceratops and Torosaurus inhabited the coastal plain near the inland ocean, primitive "horned" dinosaurs named Montanoceratops lived in uplands near the young Rocky Mountains. These little protoceratopsians fed on plants with slicing teeth and narrow beaks similar to their giant three-horned relatives. Classification: Animalia, Chordata, Vertebrata, Reptilia, Archosauria, Dinosauria, Ornithischia, Marginocephalia, Ceratopsia, Leptoceratopsidae Stratigraphy: St. Mary River Formation, Maastrichtian Stage, Upper Cretaceous Locality: Little Rocky Coulee, north of the town of Cut Bank, eastern Glacier County, northwestern Montana, USA Info. at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montanoceratops

bone museum United States Cretaceous +9
Taxa Archaeoceratops

Skeletal mount of Archaeoceratops, housed in Tamba Dinosaur Museum

museum Archaeoceratops Archaeoceratopsidae
Taxa Archaeoceratopsidae

Skeletal mount of Archaeoceratops, housed in Tamba Dinosaur Museum

museum Archaeoceratops Archaeoceratopsidae
Taxa Muttaburrasaurus

Muttaburrasaurus The plants, animals and climate of the Australian continent have changed dramatically over long periods of time. Imagine this giant creature roaming the luxuriant wet forests that covered parts of the continent in the Cretaceous period, about 100-110 million years ago. The Muttaburrasaurus ambled along on all four legs or stood on its hind legs. Its large teeth were well adapted to eat tough vegetation such as the leathery foliage of the evergreen forests of Araucaria trees, ancient relatives of the bunya pine of south-eastern Queensland. In 1963, grazier Doug Langdon discovered the fossilised bones of a dinosaur on his property near Muttaburra in central-west Queensland. It was one of the most complete dinosaur skeletons found in Australia. The bones belonged to a new species of ornithopod and palaeontologists named it Muttaburrasaurus langdoni. Cast of Muttaburresaurus langdoni 1987 made by Queensland Museum, Brisbane National Museum of Australia

museum Australia Cretaceous cast +2
Taxa Fona

Holotype of Fona herzogae NCSM 33548 at the w:North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences

museum holotype Fona
Taxa Tienshanosaurus

Holotype scapula of Tienshanosaurus chitaiensis on display at the Paleozoological Museum of China.

museum China holotype Tienshanosaurus
Taxa Nigersaurus

Nigersaurus - 01 (possibly National Museum of Nature and Science, Tokyo)

museum Nigersaurus
Taxa Yunguisaurus

Yunguisaurus liae, Zhejiang Museum of Natural History (Hangzhou)

museum Yunguisaurus
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News

The giant bones of a camarasaur exhibited for the first time in Angoulême
bone museum Diplodocus discovery
The Angoulême museum is exhibiting, from Friday May 22, the bones of a camarasaur, a 20-meter-long cousin of the diplodocus. A first, two years after their spectacular discovery in Angeac-Charente (Charente).
22/05/2026 sciencesetavenir ⚙ Auto-translated
Happy International Museum Day (2026)
museum communication
Today is International Museum Day and, here at Everything Dinosaur, we would like to celebrate the incredible work carried out by museums around the world. Museums help inspire curiosity, encourage learning and connect people with nature. They also play a crucial role in education, science communication and outreach. We have always enjoyed visiting museums, especially
18/05/2026 everythingdinosaur
Giant Tyrannosaur Fossil Found in New Mexico
museum Mexico fossil Tyrannosauridae
A large tyrannosaurid dinosaur may have stalked the floodplains of what is now New Mexico nearly 74 million years ago, according to a team of paleontologists from the University of Bath, Montana State University and the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science. The post Giant Tyrannosaur Fossil Found in New Mexico appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
15/05/2026 sci-news
Paleontologists Reconstruct Ecology of Archaeopteryx
ecology museum fossil Archaeopteryx behavior study
A comprehensive new review by Field Museum of Natural History paleontologists draws together the latest fossil evidence to offer the most complete portrait to date of Archaeopteryx’s ecology, behavior, and daily life. The post Paleontologists Reconstruct Ecology of Archaeopteryx appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
08/05/2026 sci-news
New Species of Fossil Koala Found in Museum Drawer
museum fossil discovery new species
Long-overlooked fossils in the Western Australian Museum collection have been identified as a new species of koala. The post New Species of Fossil Koala Found in Museum Drawer appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.
06/05/2026 sci-news
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