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My Dinosaur and Fossil Report

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Dinosaurs and Fossils Author: ESD Last modified by: ESD Created Date: 12/7/2002 8:45:12 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show Company: ESD Other titles: – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: My Dinosaur and Fossil Report


1
My Dinosaur and Fossil Report
www.isgs.uiuc.edu/dinos/dinos
  • Triceratops
  • by Amie

2
Characteristics
  • Triceratops was about 30 feet long, 10 feet tall,
    and weighed up to 6-12 tons. It had a short,
    pointed tail, and a bony neck frill. It had a
    parrot-like beak, many cheek teeth, and powerful
    jaws.
  • A Triceratops is an herbivore. This means that
    it eats only plants. The Triceratops probably
    lived is lush green valleys.
  • Triceratops lived in the late Cretaceous period,
    about 72 to 65 million years ago, toward the end
    of the Mesozoic, the Age of Reptiles.

3
Picture Gallery
  • Here is a picture of my dinosaur

4
What Fossils Tell us About Dinosaurs
  • Fossils can tell us about the general
    characteristics of a Triceratops.
  • Fossils can tell us about what a Triceratops ate.
  • Fossils can tell us about where a Triceratops
    might have lived.

5
General Characteristics
  • Scientists can make guesses about the size and
    appearance of the Triceratops based on fossils.

6
What They Eat
  • Triceratops had toothless beaks that were used to
    gather their food and many flat cheek teeth which
    were used to chew tough, fibrous plant material.
  • Scientists can make guesses about what the
    Triceratops ate based on the size and shape of
    fossilized teeth found.

7
Where They Live
  • Scientists can make guesses about where the
    Triceratops lived by looking at its eating
    habits.
  • Scientists can also use fossilized footprints.

www.ldeo.columbia.edu/polsen/nbcp/pekintracks
8
How Fossils Are Formed
  • Fossils need 3 things to be formed
  • heat
  • pressure
  • time

www.eyesoftime.com/teacher/dino.htm
9
Work Cited
  • www.zoomdinosaurs.com
  • www.eyesoftime.com/teacher/dino.htm
  • www.ldeo.columbia.edu/polsen/nbcp/pekintracks
  • www.isgs.uiuc.edu/dinos/dinos
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