Dinosaurs - weird feathered dinosaurs

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feathered dinosaur smallest dinosaurI really love dinosaurs… I think all kids love dinosaurs, especially the really weird ones that no one hears about,

Here are some of those really strange looking prehistoric animals.

Weird Feathered Dinosaurs, kinda weird huh? but here is one the Troodon, prounounced True-don

The Name Means: “Tooth that wounds” The troodon is thought to have been about 6 feet and weigh about what a large dog does, around 100 lbs.

The Troodon lived in the US and Canada in the Late Cretaceous period - 67 MYA

I found more info about this really weird looking dinosaur on the internet:

Troodon may have been the smartest of all the dinosaurs. It had a very large brain when compared to its overall body size, which would have given it huge hunting advantage. It also had large eyes, long legs for speedy pursuit of prey, and sharp teeth.

Troodon is one of the most well known dinosaurs, with over 20 known specimens, including an egg with a Troodon embryo inside. It was actually one of the first North American dinosaurs to be named, originally described in 1856. However, the fragmentary remains were attributed to a number of dinosaurs before the original genus became accepted. It wasn’t until Dr. Dale Russell described a fairly complete specimen that the pieces fell into place. Troodon is also used as evidence in the bird/dinosaur debate, as it shares a number of common characteristics with birds.




the odd looking troodon dinosaur running

Troodon fossils were found in montana

troodon feathered dino fossil and egg

This is another odd looking feathered dino, the Compsognathus. The Compsognathus is another small dinosaur. Having been only a few feet and 6 lbs! Not what we think of a dinosaur was. Dino’s came in many sizes and not all were the giant 3 ton monsters we imagine them to be.

Compsognathus longipes

Falcarius

“Sickle Maker” This guy lived in Utah and was a mid-size, as far as dinos go - Falcarius was about 13 feet and weighed 850 lbs.

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Nomimgia

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Here is a really weird looking one, actually, the Buitreraptor looks really scary to me. Check out the huge teeth on that puppy.

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The Corythosaurus has no feathers - but looks like he should have.

The Corythosaurus - A really strange looking dinosaur that looks like a cross between an ostrich and a lizard - he is one of the duck-billed dinosaurs and a very large boy.. or girl

kore-Ith-oh -Saw-rus -  weird corythosaurus duck beeked dinosaur

Another really strange looking Dino is the Corythosaurus Pronounced: kore-Ith-oh -Saw-rus “Corinthian Lizard” The Corythosaurus was about 33 feet and Weighted an astonishing 3.5 tons - wow, thats one giant ostrich looking thing!

When: Late Cretaceous - 75 MYA
Where: Alberta, Canada; Montana, USA

He does not have feathers, but really looks like he should have!

The Corythosaurus was a planting-eating, duck-billed dinosaur that is sometimes referred to as hadrosaurs. It had a toothless, wide beak and hundreds of teeth in the back part of its mouth that it used for grinding tough plants to mush. Like other duckbills, it was a herd animal that traveled in large groups. Fossils of this dinosaur are sometimes found together with other plant-eating dinosaurs, which leads scientists to believe that different types of plant-eaters grouped together to feed, drink and maybe even migrate (moving from one area to another).
The Corythasaurus has a large crest on its head and it is thought that the males had a larger crest than the females.

More feathered Dinos - check em out





Dinney the world’s largest dinosaur

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In Cabazon there is a place where you can see a huge replica of a dinosaur. His name is Diney and he was built by Claude Bell on a road side in Cabazon, California

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Even though we have never been there, it sure does sound fascinating

Here is the info I found about Claude Bell and his giant replica dinosaurs on the internet:

Claude Bell’s dinosaurs are icons of roadside America - some people may remember them from Pee Wee’s Big Adventure, while others have grown up with them along the highway in southern California. The most amazing thing about these dinos are the attention to detail. The builder wanted to be as accurate as possible, while creating an exciting environment for children to explore. The belly of the first one, the brontosaurus, was originally designed to be a natural history museum of and about dinosaurs.

The introductory poster leading up into “Dinney”:
Welcome to Dinney the Dinosaur
Dinney’s creator is Mr. Claude K. Bell. Mr. Bell has invested 11 years of his life and over a quarter of a million dollars in Dinney. He designed and built Dinney without the help of a construction company or investors. Nestled in Dinney’s heart is a small gift shop and museum, which is open to the public at an admission charge of .50 cents for adults and .25 cents for children. Children under 10 are admitted free! It is interesting to note that at this rate it would take 32 years to pay for Dinney, and this does not include paying the bills for operating him. As Mr. Bell is 80 years old, he has no thoughts of ever regaining his investment. INSTEAD — he plans on constructing a towering Tyranasaurous Rex with a slide down his back! This should be complete in about 5 years, as Mr. Bell has already solved many of the structural problems encountered in building a Dinosaur. Thank you for this visit, and we hope you enjoy and appreciate the work that Mr. Bell has put into this creation for you.

In an early interview, Mr. Bell said “When I was a kid, my uncle took me to see the big elephant house at the boardwalk in Atlantic City. that did it. from then on I decided someday I would build something big like that elephant house.” He then worked for Knott’s Berry Farm, making very large things for the park. He took that knowledge and put it to use along Interstate 10.

World’s Largest Dinosaurs Stats

Started on the garden itself in 1964

Dinney: 45 ft. high, 150 ft. long, welded steel armature and cement (castoffs from the freeway after a flash flood buried some of the materials andstate engineering practices prohibit reuse), girders from a defunct drive-in theater. And 1,200 bagfuls of cement.
11 years, $250,000.

Rex: 65 ft. high, similar construction as Dinney. It’s rumored that bathrooms had to be added for the production of Pee Wee’s Big Adventure. Begun 1981, ended approximately 1986.

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