Dinosaurs Story
In the first years of the juridical period, when the world was restored after one of the worst mass wars in history, the humble meat from Wales paved the way for the most threatening predators ever on this planet. The other day, scientists announced the discovery of dinosaur fossil remains, known as the Dracoraptor, who lived 200 million years ago and was the predecessor of later damsy monsters like tyrannosaurs (Tyrannosaurus rex), allosaurus (Allosaurus) and Spinosaurus (Spinosaurus).
" Therapist " means the " dragon thief " . The red dragon is portrayed on the Valley flag.
The excavated person is 2, 1 metre long (adults may reach 3 metres) and is represented by the paleontologist Stephen Vidovic of the British University of Portsmout.
This mass extinction that took place in the legal period allowed dinosaurs to become dominant terrestrial animals. The biggest. terrestrial predators at the end of the trias were not dinosaurs, but slogans, four-legged reptiles. There were fitosaurs in the rivers, huge crocodile reptiles.
Both groups vanished during mass extinction, freeing the path of damaging dinosaurs, which had so far been too small to become kings of terrestrial predators.
Vidovic says that fossil-rapers found on the beach in 2014 near the Wallis City of Penarth represent the most complete dinosaurs that have been left since then, 40 per cent of the skeleton remained.
" This dinosaur fills some gaps in our knowledge of dinosaurs, which survived the triacous extinction and gave rise to the development of all dinosaurs we know from the Park of the Jura Period, books and television, said Vidovic. - Dinosaurs multiplied and filled the environmental niche of the early legal period.
It was one of the first representatives of the therod group, which included T. rex, and it was the same form, only much smaller.
“He has found practically a formula of success for large terrestrial dams”, said by Vidovic. And if the large therots were hunting large-scale mining, the dracorapers were satisfied with small lizards and mammals, processing them with small but frequent teeth of up to an inch.