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Saturday, 11 July 2020

Top 10 Deadliest Dinosaurs

Now watching dinosaur movies is very interesting, but when you do not like to see any dinosaurs living during the Mesozoic era, because all of them were deadly! However, some species were much more dangerous than others. Now we will talk about which were the deadliest dinosaurs at that time! Which would turn you into blood in the same shoes! We call it "Jurassic World" in common language!

Deadly Dinosaurs of the Mesozoic Era


01 Jignotosaurus Dinosaur

Now all the names will be ridiculous. Now we cannot name them like Chiman Dhokla Wala and Pappu Pager. During the Cretaceous period, the dinosaurs of South America were larger and fiercer than their counterparts at other places in the world. Giganotosaurus, an eight- to 10-ton, three-fingered hunter whose remains have been found closely associated with the people of Argentinosaurus, is one of the largest dinosaurs to ever walk the Earth. Unavoidable conclusion: Gigonotosaurus was one of the few treatments capable of taking a full-grown adult (or at least, more manageable teen)

02 Utreptors

Now these dinosaur words Dinonichus and Velociraptor get all the press, but for the sheer killing potential, no raptor was more dangerous than Eutraptor, of which adult specimens weigh about a ton (compared to 200 pounds , For an exceptionally large Deinonichus). The Utreptor's characteristic sickle-shaped toes were nine inches long and incredibly sharp. Oddly, this giant rapper lived 50 million years before its more famous descendants, which were considerably smaller (but much faster).

03 Tyrannosaurus Rex

To date no one knows whether Tyrannosaurus rex was particularly fierce or frightening compared to others, less popular atrocities such as Albertosaurus or Eliormas — or whether it was a victim of living prey or most of its feasting on already dead corpses Expenditure. Whatever the case, there is no question that T. The Rex was a fully functional killing machine that was exactly when conditions demanded, its five-to-eight tons of bulk, sharp eyesight, and huge heads with numerous, sharp teeth. (You have to admit, though, its small arms give it a slightly comical look.)




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04 Stegosaurus

Well, you can't expect to encounter a small-headed, small-brained plant eater like Stegosaurus in the list of the world's deadliest dinosaurs - but focus your attention on the other side of this herb's body and you will find a dangerous spiked Tails would see could easily bump into the skull of a hungry Allosaurus (see Skull 8). This Thagomizer (named after a famous "Far Side" cartoon) helped to compensate for Stagosaurus' lack of intelligence and speed. One can easily see it falling down on the ground and its tail swinging wildly in all directions.

05 spinosaurus

In nearly an equivalent weight class as Giganotosaurus and tyrannosaur , the North African Spinosaurus was blessed additional evolutionary benefits: it's the world's first recognized swimming dinosaur. This 10-ton hunter spent his days in and around rivers, pinning fish between his giant, crocodile-like jaws and occasionally surfacing like a shark to terrorize small, land-bound dinosaurs. Spinosaurus can sometimes be confused with the comparatively sized crocodile Sarkosuch, aka "Supercroc", which is certainly one of the epic matches of the Middle Cretaceous period.

06 Majungasaurus

Majungthorus, known as Majhungtholus, has been labeled a cannibalistic dinosaur by the press, and even though this case may be exaggerated, this does not mean that the reputation of this carnivore is completely unknown. The discovery of ancient Majungasaurus bones with equally ancient Majungasaurus teeth marks could also be an honest indication that these one-ton theropods hunt others of their kind (to eat their remains when they were very hungry and perhaps when they were dead Hunting). However, it seems that the hunter spent much of his time scavenging the small, quivering, plant-eating dinosaurs of late Cretaceous Africa.

07 ankylosaurus


The armored dinosaur Ankylosaurus was a close relative of Stegosaurus, and these dinosaurs repelled their enemies in a similar way. While the tail end of Stegosaurus had a pointed Thagomizer, Ankylosaurus was equipped with a giant, hundred-pound tail club, the late Cretaceous counterpart of a medieval mace. A purposeful swing from this club could easily shatter a hungry Tyrannosaurus rex's hind leg, or even knock out some of its teeth, although one imagines that it might also be employed in dealing with intrapasis during the 

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Now based on deadly fossil evidence, it can be fatal for any given dinosaur genus to speculate about how many people exist at any given time. But if we agree to make that imaginative leap, Allosaurus (much later) was a far more lethal predator than Tyrannosaurus rex - many specimens of this fierce, strong-jawed, three-ton meat-eater in the western United States. Have been discovered in As deadly as it was, however, the Allosaurus was not very smart - for example, a group of adults who survived the same mine in Utah, were already trapped and struggling