All dinosaurs shed their old teeth regularly. Having constant replacements for old teeth is a very useful adaptation. Of course, a dinosaur never would shed all of its teeth at once. It would only lose one or two teeth every once in a while.
Something special about an Allosaurus dinosaur is that it has huge sharp teeth unlike other dinosaurs.
They were razor sharp that in one bite your dead
how many teeth does allosaurus have
i want to know what the allosaurus code is in battel of giant dinosaurs strike
Not any more, but Allosaurus is the name we've given to a species of dinosaurs.
First, there is the skull shape and the large, curved, pointed, serrated teeth. The large skull is adapted to delivering mortal bite wounds, and the teeth are perfect for killing as well as shearing flesh off of a carcass. Allosaurus teeth couldn't be used effectively for eating plants. In addition, there are many fossil bones of herbivorous dinosaurs that bear tooth marks from Allosaurus.
Both Allosaurus and Apatosaurus lived in the same area at the same time, and they were both Saurischian (lizard hipped) dinosaurs. Apatosaurus was an herbivore with four legs, a long neck, and a tiny head, and was many times larger than Allosaurus. Allosaurus was a bipedal carnivore with a very large head and sharp teeth.
suchomimus. allosaurus would be severely injured by its enemies claws and allosaurus with its weak bite force would usually flee. suchomimus was about 2 times bigger then allosaurus but suchomimus did not prey on large animals.its teeth,and snout were designed for catching fish and small dinosaurs. if forced it would battle and they did not live in the same period.
Allosaurus means "different lizard." At the time of its discovery, Allosaurus appeared to have vertebrae that were different from other dinosaurs, hence the name.
Other, smaller dinosaurs.
Allosaurus Apatosaurus Albertasaurus
With a passcode its 35274