how big is chasmosaurus
Chasmosaurus was created in 1914.
Chasmosaurus is a genus of ceratopsid dinosaur, from the Upper Cretaceous Period.
In February of 1914, Lawrence Morris Lambe gave the Chasmosaurus its current name. Chasmosaurus means, "opening lizard," because of the large openings in its frill.
· Carcharodontosaurus · Chasmosaurus
chasmosaurus ate plants
A nonexistant biome filled with magical fairies and trolls.
All dinosaurs that ate plants and had three horns were relatives of Triceratops. Some examples that are not Triceratops, but are related to Triceratops, include Agujaceratops, Anchiceratops, Arrhinoceratops, and Chasmosaurus.
The Triceratops,Chasmosaurus,Arrhinoceratops,Anchiceratops,Pentaceratops,andTorosaurus.
No dinosaurs could fly (though one branch did become birds). "Chaz" was a member of the ceratopsians, heavy, elephant-like creatures with bony brow frills, exactly NOT the equipment one needs to soar through the air.
Chasmosaurus lived in western North America during the late Cretaceous. At the time, the area was a coastal floodplain with rivers and swamps. There were wet and dry seasons. Plants included conifers, such as Sequoia, cycads, ferns, ginkgoes, horsetails, and flowering plants such as palm trees and primitive grasses.
The most commonly known dinosaur fitting this description is the triceratops. it has a small nose horn and 2 large brow horns. This is probably the one you are looking for. There is also the chasmosaurus, which had all three horns the same size.
Triceratops belonged to the family Ceratopsidae, which also included dinosaurs such as Pachyrhinosaurus, Styracosaurus, and Chasmosaurus. Taxonomically speaking, all dinosaurs belonged to the class Reptilia and the clade Dinosauria.Triceratops' taxonomy proceeds as follows:Domain: EukaryoteKingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataClass: Reptilia-Sub-class: DinosauriaOrder: OrnithischiaFamily: CeratopsidaeGenus: TriceratopsSpecies: T. horridus