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Albertosaurus may have been big, but its brain was just as formidable as its teeth. This clever dino knew that younger pack members were smaller and lighter, so their job was to chase prey toward ...
Albertosaurus work as a group to hunt down prey much larger than they are. Smaller Albertosaurus were faster than the heavier, stronger members of the group.
If you were to hike across the North Slope 75 million years ago, you would think you were in a Louisiana bayou, writes.
The Albertosaurus jaw portion is just one of many bones recovered during the past decade from a Late Cretaceous bonebed in Alberta, Canada's Dry Island Buffalo Jump Provincial Park.
The heterodonty of Albertosaurus sarcophagus and Tyrannosaurus rex: biomechanical implications inferred through 3-D models Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 47 (9), 1253-1261 DOI: 10.1139/E10 ...
Albertosaurus and Mummies, while hardly polar opposites, demonstrate different attitudes toward non-fiction. While both offer interesting treatments, Mummies is a more pleasing book to pick up and ...
Walking With Dinosaurs will show off a realistic Albertosaurus complete with feathers. BBC. Related to the T. rex, Albertosaurus are the fastest animal you'll see in Walking With Dinosaurs, and ...
Which species of tyrannosaur created the tracks is unknown. Three large tyrannosaurs – Albertosaurus, Gorgosaurus, and Daspletosaurus – all lived in western Canada at the time the tracks were ...
The isle stands in for prehistoric Alberta in Walking With Dinosaurs, home to deadly predators from 71 million years ago.
Albertosaurus was shorter than most of the RVs I’ve been stuck behind on my journey around the great province of Alberta, but as a smaller ancestor of T. rex, he still packed a serious bite.
Tyrannosaur Survivorship -- Tough Times For Teens Date: July 13, 2006 Source: University of Alberta Summary: A massive dinosaur death bed in Alberta has helped map out the animal's life span and ...
AUDIO: Albertosaurus discovery explored The amazing fossil discovery of a huge carnivorous dinosaur in southern Alberta a century ago has been retraced and explored by a Canadian paleontologist.
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