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SAUROLOPHUS & TARBOSAURUS
Against a backdrop of bald cypress and metasequoia, a group of Saurolophus plunge into a river to escape the attack of Tarbosaurus. Tarbosaurus was a forty-foot-long theropod dinosaur that lived in Late Cretaceous Mongolia sventy million years ago and was contemporary with Tyrannosaurus in North America. Saurolophus was a large duckbill dinosaur, reaching forty feet in length. It was widely distributed, living in both Asia and North America. Duckbills were among the most abundant herbivores in the Late Cretaceous. Bot bipedal and quadrapedal, duckbills fed on leaves of trees and low ground cover. Duckbills are generally believed to have nested in colonies, cared for their young and traveled in large herds. They were a principal source of food for large theropods, such as Tarbosaurus. Artwork Doug Henderson, 1990 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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