Step 1: Get a good grip on the bony frill. Step 2: Rip off the head. Step 3: Nibble on the face. Step 4: Savor the delicate cuts at the neck. This is how researchers say a Tyrannosaurus may have ...
The North Carolina Museum of Natural History will be putting a pair of "Dueling Dinosaurs" on display in 2022. The two creatures — a Tyrannosaurus rex and Triceratops — appear to have killed each ...
It's a display 67 million years in the making. Remarkable fossils are set to go on display for the first time ever, showcasing a T. rex and a Triceratops fighting a ferocious battle to the death.
Dinosaurs are coming to downtown Raleigh this year. And hundreds of thousands more visitors are expected to be coming soon to one particular building in downtown Raleigh: the North Carolina Museum of ...
OK, the first thing to know is that the big meat-eater wanted to get at the yummy neck muscles, according to work presented last week at the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology's annual meeting in ...
That battle, between a juvenile Tyrannosaurus rex and a Triceratops, likely took place an estimated 67 million years ago. The dinos were found about 10 years ago. North Carolina dinosaur enthusiasts ...
It may have been a battle for the ages in ancient Montana. About 67 million years ago, two iconic dinosaurs, a Triceratops horridus and a Tyrannosaurus rex, died and were quickly buried together side ...
The Mace Brown Museum of Natural History at the College of Charleston has a couple of new residents. Casts of skulls of a Triceratops and a Tyrannosaurus officially made their debut as the newest ...
Museum workers found a T. rex tooth among the triceratops fossils on Thursday as they excavated prehistoric artifacts from a construction site in Thornton. The T. rex was likely scavenging and came ...
New research confirms that Nanotyrannus was not a juvenile T. rex, but a predatory species native to the Late Cretaceous ...