News

Dinosaurs (which means 'terrible lizard' in Greek) like Apatosaurus and Diplodocus had 'incredibly fast replacement rates and simple teeth,' which experts believe may have allowed them to eat ...
Dinosaurs had plenty of teeth. Published 5:00 am Monday, July 22, 2013. By Brad Balukjian / Los Angeles Times. ... These creatures, including the childhood favorite Apatosaurus ...
Dinosaurs almost bankrupted the tooth fairy. New research shows that the lumbering plant-eaters called sauropods produced new teeth as often as twice per month and had up to nine backup teeth in a ...
About 230 million years later, scientists have discovered Africa’s oldest dinosaur to date on the continent in Zimbabwe—and the nearly complete skeleton is now helping scientists better ...
A new analysis of numerous sauropod specimens suggests that the classic dinosaur possibly had enough unique traits to be distinguished from Apatosaurus, after all. The longer a dinosaur lives […] ...
Apatosaurus isn’t the only dinosaur to present a short cartoon autobiography. The same series also features a regal Tyrannosaurus , a Baryonyx suffering ennui, and an anxious Beipiaosaurus who ...
Dinosaurs may have gone extinct 65 million years ago thanks to a massive asteroid impact, ... 70M year-old dinosaur replaced its teeth as fast as sharks. By Chris Ciaccia Fox News.
The apatosaurus name, which was published first, took precedence while the brontosaurus was cast aside. Both dinosaurs lived approximately 150 million years ago.
Dinosaurs almost bankrupted the tooth fairy. New research shows that the lumbering plant-eaters called sauropods produced new teeth as often as twice per month and had up to nine backup ...