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It's my birthday, I want dinosaurs.


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Tonguez

A suffusion of yellow
The animals certainly existed; the problem is that two people gave their copy of that animal different names at the same time - and knew they were doing it.

"Apatosaurus" won out by The Rules for Naming Fossils. But I still use "Brontosaurus" for any of the big sauropods that I don't remember the right name offhand.
Maybe because I watched The Flintstones as a kid and still want to find that XL slab of Bronto ribs that tipped over Fred's car.

Oh I agree. Bronto is much cool than Appaty, so I too stick to calling them Brontos. The palaeontologist should just give in to public sentiment and declare Bronto official
 

38686050_2087328614917132_7669759383798022144_n.jpg
 

Thanks all. :)

This is something that's been bugging me for a while and am wondering if anybody knows

How do paleontologists determine which creature is in which ecosystem?

Like if I do a temperate hills in the jurassic, which dinosaurs are native to that region?
 

MNblockhead

A Title Much Cooler Than Anything on the Old Site
Lots of general resources freely available, but not much that a DM can easily use as-is to create random encounter tables.

Fact Monster has an easy-to-read summary of habitats in Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous periods with a couple examples of dinosaurs that could be found in each ecosystem.

https://www.factmonster.com/dk/encyclopedia/science/dinosaur-habitats

I'm not sure how accurate the following page it, but it has a nice graphic and breif descriptions of various prehistoric habitats with representative dinosaurs.

http://prehlife.weebly.com/habitat.html

By far the best page I found was at the ThoughtCo website:

https://www.thoughtco.com/where-did-dinosaurs-live-1091965

But if you are really dedicated, the University of Hong Kong has an awesome looking six-week on-line course on Dinosaur Ecosystems that they are offering for FREE. Next session starts on October 3rd: https://www.edx.org/course/dinosaur-ecosystems
 





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