Updated on March 27, 2023 by Liz Gartley
Leave a Comment
In a study published last month in Communications Biology, a Nature portfolio journal, authors Junki Yoshida, Yoshitsugu Kobayashi, and Mark A. Norell reported on the fossil larynx (or voice box) found in the non-avian dinosaur Pinacosaurus grangeri, an… Read More
Ankylosaurs – the weird, spiky, armoured dinosaurs with tail clubs – are always rare, but two of the best places to find good specimens of this unusual group of dinosaurs are Alberta and, you guessed it, Mongolia.
Category: Blog Posts, English Tags: Alberta, Albertan dinosaurs, ankylosaurs, armored dinosaurs, Canada, Canadian scientist, dinosaurs, Gobi, Mongolia, Mongolian dinosaurs, palaeontology, paleontology, Phil Currie, Phillip Currie, pinacosaurus, Royal Ontario Museum, science, tail weapons, University of Toronto, Victoria Arbour
Tag: pinacosaurus
Did Pinacosaurus have a beautiful singing voice?
Updated on March 27, 2023 by Liz Gartley
Leave a Comment
In a study published last month in Communications Biology, a Nature portfolio journal, authors Junki Yoshida, Yoshitsugu Kobayashi, and Mark A. Norell reported on the fossil larynx (or voice box) found in the non-avian dinosaur Pinacosaurus grangeri, an… Read More
Category: Blog Posts, Dinosaurs, English Tags: Mongolian dinosaurs, palaeontology, paleontology, pinacosaurus
From prairie to Gobi in search of dinosaurs
Updated on March 6, 2017 by Bolortsetseg Minjin
Leave a Comment
Ankylosaurs – the weird, spiky, armoured dinosaurs with tail clubs – are always rare, but two of the best places to find good specimens of this unusual group of dinosaurs are Alberta and, you guessed it, Mongolia.
Category: Blog Posts, English Tags: Alberta, Albertan dinosaurs, ankylosaurs, armored dinosaurs, Canada, Canadian scientist, dinosaurs, Gobi, Mongolia, Mongolian dinosaurs, palaeontology, paleontology, Phil Currie, Phillip Currie, pinacosaurus, Royal Ontario Museum, science, tail weapons, University of Toronto, Victoria Arbour