Name | Type | Length | Weight | Food | Info |
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Edmontosaurus | large ornithopod | 13.0 m | 3,400 kg | tough pine needles, cones and twigs | EdmontosaurusHard conifer needles, twigs and seeeds have been found in Edmontosaurus stomachs. Mummified specimens have some preserved skin, so we know its texture (but not the colour). |
Spinosaurus | large theropod | 14.0 m | 7,400 kg | fish and maybe other dinosaurs | SpinosaurusSpinosaurus was a large meat-eating dinosaur from Africa. Scientists think it may have lived a semi-aquatic lifestyle. |
Triceratops | ceratopsian | 9.0 m | 5,500 kg | tough palm fronds | TriceratopsTriceratops was a plant-eater with specialised teeth for cutting and slicing and a huge stomach for digesting tough plant matter. It would have used its horns for defending itself from predators like Tyrannosaurus. |
Stegosaurus | armoured dinosaur | 9.0 m | 4,500 kg | plants | StegosaurusThis slow-moving plant-eater used spikes on its tail to fend off would-be predators. The jury is still out on what the spiny plates on its back were used for. |
Tyrannosaurus | large theropod | 12.0 m | 7,000 kg | other animals | TyrannosaurusAn infamous meat-eating predator. Look at the evidence as to whether Tyrannosaurus hunted in packs or alone. |
Diplodocus | sauropod | 26.0 m | 15,000 kg | leaves from trees and soft plants | DiplodocusWhat did this giant look like and how did it hold its enormous neck? |
Coelophysis | small theropod | 2.0 m | 27 kg | vertebrates | CoelophysisThis small meat-eater was one of the earliest dinosaurs. It was fast and agile and would have fed on animals like small reptiles and insects. |