It lived in the early Cretaceous Period.
Deinonychus probably lived to be around 40 years old
Yes. Deinonychus was a biped.
Deinonychus was located in the US and it lived in hell creek, montana.
Deinonychus - band - ended in 2008.
Deinonychus - band - was created in 1992.
Deinonychus antirrhopus was created in 1969.
Deinonychus was a carnivore, so it ate other animals.
Yes. Deinonychus was a real dinosaurs closely related to velociraptor.
Deinonychus lived between 115 and 108 million years ago in North America, while Iguanodon lived between 126 and 125 million years ago in Europe. Thus, Deinonychus never would have encountered Iguanodon. Fossil evidence shows that Deinonychus often ate the remains of Tenontosaurus, a 20+ foot long herbivore that weighed up to 2 tons. Whether the Deinonychus were scavenging or had hunted the Tenontosaurus in a pack is unknown. Even if it did hunt large herbivores in a pack, though, Iguanodon was nearly twice as large as Tenontosaurus, so in the case that some Deinonychus did come across an Iguanodon, it probably would have been very difficult for a pack of Deinonychus to hunt and kill an adult Iguanodon. A young Iguanodon would have been easy prey for Deinonychus, though.
Deinonychus
They are carnivorous.
Deinonychus' have teeth that is placed under the category of Stabber, which means that it is a carnivore.
We can only speculate one what color deinonychus was. We do know that deinonychus had feathers from preserved feathers in close relatives of deinonychus and from quill knobs found in young deinonychus specimens. The feathers on the arms and the end of the tail were probably large and well structured, giving the dinosaur a very birdlike appearance. It would have stood a little over three feet tall and measured about ten feet long from the nose to the end of the tail. One of the most notable features of deinonychus were the claws on its feet. Each foot bore four toes: two contacted the ground and acted as normal toes, one remained as a dewclaw, and the inner toe bore a sickle-shaped claw that it kept raised above the ground. This earned deinonychus its name, which means "terrible claw." The link below shows and artist's interpretation of what deinonychus may have looked like. Note that the colors are speculation.