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Ankylosaur
"Fused
Reptile"
MIDDLE JURASSIC to LATE
CRETACEOUS PERIOD
188 - 65 million years ago
The
skeletal and armor design of an ANKYLOSAUR makes them the "walking tanks"
of prehistory. With an array of armor plates, knobs, spikes,
scales, multiple bone layers and in some, a tail club, ankylosaurs
relied on protection rather than speed to avoid falling victim to the
top predators of their time.
There
were two sub-groups of the ankylosaurs. First the NODOSAURIDS
appeared in the Middle Jurassic and survived into the Cretaceous.
By the Early Cretaceous, the ANKYLOSAURIDS emerged and existed all the
way to the end . The most notable difference between the two is
that nodosaurs lacked horns on their head and a tail club while
akylosaurs possessed both.

Ankylosaurs include several different species spanning many world
regions. Sizes range from 8 feet on up to 33 feet in length and
weighing up to 2 tons. They all walked on four feet and were very
slow in their locomotion. Ankylosaurs were herbivorous,
ornithischian (bird-hipped) dinosaurs. They had toothless beaks
and small leaf-shaped teeth that lined the sides of their jaws.
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The most
dominant characteristic of ankylosaurs is the presence of extensive bony
armor plating. Normally moveable portions of the skeleton found in
other dinosaurs were fused in ankylosaurs. Most remarkable is the
multiple layers of bone armor that covered the skull. Even the
eyelids of ankylosaurs were bone! With such an impregnable design
to the skull, it is likely that an ankylosaur could have survived any
attack to its head region.
The
most famous part of anatomy of the ankylosaurids is their heavy tail
club made up of several heavy fused bones. Massive muscles and
tendons provided strength and power to the wielding of this defensive
mechanism against large therapods such as Tyrannosaurus rex.
Without a tail club, the probable defense of nodosaurids was to hunker
down and wait out an attack like a turtle, relying rather, on its spikes
and armor for protection.

Articulated ankylosaur remains are rarely found. Most ankylosaur
fossils collected are isolated teeth and pieces of their bony armor.
Ankylosaur
remains have been found in North America, Europe, Australia, Antarctica,
and Mongolia.
Common
misspellings: Ankalosaur, Ancylosaur, Ankelosaur, Nodasaur,
Nodasaurid
The
dinosaur specimens we offer are not limited to what is just shown here.
Please inquire as to any of your specific needs.
Special thanks to the highly talented artist
TODD
MARSHALL
for the use of
some of his beautiful work shown in this
section.
All
images and text on this site are protected by copyright and may not be used in
any way.
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