Comments: 12
Brad-ysaurus [2008-01-17 22:00:38 +0000 UTC]
Very informative. I always thought Pachyrhinosaurus was much bigger than a 'typical' centrosaurine, getting into the Triceratops size range, but I've never seen the fossils of it myself.
You're only a few species off from having all of the known centrosaurines, do you plan to return to this work as you complete them?
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Brad-ysaurus In reply to NTamura [2008-01-18 18:33:36 +0000 UTC]
You can skip Monoclonius, its probably a subadult of some other centrosaurine. Centrosaurus brinkmanni and Styracosaurus ovatus would have looked like any other centrosaur except for the cranial ornamentation- S. ovatus is known from just the parietal, but that's probably enough to restore it fairly accurately. And although it is still unnamed, the "Last Chance Ceratopsian" is also a centrosaurine and you can find some reference images of it online.
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HellraptorStudios [2008-01-17 21:41:39 +0000 UTC]
good work here, you have to do one with long-crested ceratopsians like torosaurus and chasmosaurus.
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TehFuzzyDuck [2008-01-17 17:51:26 +0000 UTC]
I love these charts and can't wait to see more! I wish I could put them up in my room.
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EmperorDinobot [2008-01-17 10:00:03 +0000 UTC]
Excellent medley!
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