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  2. Spinosaurus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinosaurus

    The estimates were criticized because the skull length estimate was uncertain, and (assuming that body mass increases as the cube of body length) scaling Suchomimus, which was 11 m (36 ft) long and 3.8 t (4.2 short tons) in mass, to the range of estimated lengths of Spinosaurus would produce an estimated body mass of 11.7 to 16.7 t (12.9 to 18. ...

  3. Spinosauridae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinosauridae

    The genus Spinosaurus, from which the family, one of its subfamilies (Spinosaurinae) and tribes (Spinosaurini) borrow their names, is the longest known terrestrial predator from the fossil record, with an estimated length of up to 14 meters (46 ft) and body mass of up to 7.4 metric tons (8.2 short tons) (similar to the weight of an African ...

  4. Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cretaceous–Paleogene...

    The temperature increased about three to four degrees very rapidly between 65.4 and 65.2 million years ago, which is very near the time of the extinction event. Not only did the climate temperature increase, but the water temperature decreased, causing a drastic decrease in marine diversity. [266]

  5. List of North American animals extinct in the Holocene

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_North_American...

    Likely extinct due to breeding habitat degradation by introduced feral goats and predation by feral cats and dogs; however the natural difficulty of its detection, lack of thorough surveys in the breeding season after 1906 and reports of unidentified storm-petrel calls at night may indicate that it is still extant.

  6. Triassic–Jurassic extinction event - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triassic–Jurassic...

    However, pinpointing the extinction of these different land reptile groups is difficult, as the last stage of the Triassic, the Rhaetian, and the first stage of the Jurassic, the Hettangian, each have few records of large land animals; some paleontologists have considered only phytosaurs and procolophonids to have become extinct at the Triassic ...

  7. Timeline of Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event research

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Cretaceous...

    He also suggested that mammals may have driven the dinosaurs extinct by eating all of their eggs. [7] 1928. L. Müller proposed that volcanic eruptions drove the dinosaurs extinct. [7] H. T. Marshall suggested that bombardment from cosmic or ultraviolet radiation caused the extinction of the dinosaurs. [21] 1929

  8. Sauropod hiatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sauropod_hiatus

    Definite evidence of Late Cretaceous sauropods in North America was first discovered in 1922, when Charles Whitney Gilmore described Alamosaurus sanjuanensis. [1] The term "sauropod hiatus" was coined by researchers Spencer G. Lucas and Adrian P. Hunt in 1989 to describes how fossils of the clade become scarce in western North America near the beginning of the Late Cretaceous.

  9. Sigilmassasaurus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sigilmassasaurus

    Neck reconstructions of Sigilmassasaurus (top) and Baryonyx. The validity of Sigilmassaurus, however, did not go unchallenged shortly after it was named.In 1996, Paul Sereno and colleagues described a Carcharodontosaurus skull (SGM-Din-1) from Morocco, as well as a neck vertebra (SGM-Din-3) which resembled that of "Spinosaurus B," which they therefore synonymized with Carcharodontosaurus. [11]