• 7 yıl önce
TOY DINOSAUR FIGURES Saichania vs Giganotosaurus Dinosaurs Fight Schleich 2-pack Toy Review. Watch the Saichania and Giganotosaurus get in a fight over dinosaur eggs and see who wins??\r
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My Research Notes for this dinosaur video:\r
Saichania - Sye-khan-ee-aa\r
What does the name Saichania mean? - Beautiful One\r
How long was Saichania? 21.00 feet 6.50 meters\r
How heavy was Saichania? 5700.00 pounds 2500.00 kilograms\r
What dinosaur class was Saichania assigned to? Ankylosauria\r
What did Saichania eat? Plants\r
How many years ago did Saichania live? 75,000,000 Years Ago\r
In what period did Saichania live? Late Cretaceous\r
Where did Saichania live?Asia, Mongolia\r
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Saichania was a large ankylosaurid. Maryańska estimated its length at seven meters.\r
Saichania shared the general ankylosaurid build, being a low-slung, broad, heavily armoured dinosaur, with short forelimbs. Even for an ankylosaurid however,Saichania is exceptionally robust, its rump strengthened by ossifications and fusions of the vertebral column, ribs, shoulder girdle and breast bones. It could defend itself against predators like Tarbosaurus with a tail-club. On the torso keeled osteoderms were present. Saichania bit off plants in its desert habitat with a horny beak and processed them in its wide hindgut.\r
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Giganotosaurus - ‘jiga-note-a-saw-rus\r
You pronounce their name jiga-note-a-saw-rus.\r
The meaning of their name is giant southern lizard.\r
They were meat eaters.\r
They had very small brains.\r
Their length was around 12-13 metres (40 feet)\r
They weighed up to 13 tons (almost 2 elephants).\r
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Lived in what is now Argentina during the early Late Cretaceous Period,[3] approximately some 99.6 to 97 million years ago.[4] It included some of the largest known terrestrial carnivores, with known individuals equaling or slightly bigger than the size of the largest of the genera Tyrannosaurus and Carcharodontosaurus, but not as large as those of Spinosaurus. Originally, there was no evidence that Giganotosaurus hunted in groups, but a recent discovery from slightly younger rocks shows that they indeed may have lived in packs of 6-12 or more individuals.

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