The dinosaur with three horns is called the "Triceratops". It is a large plant eater with a frill protecting it's neck. The Triceratops uses the horns for spearing plants, and as weapons to protect itself from predators.
The triceratops is a three horneddinosaur.
Triceratops.
the triceratops has 3 horns
A triceratops
easy its the triceratops
Triceratops
Triceratops
Triceratops
The answer to the question is a dinosaur named anchiceratops. They have a total of 3 horns and, they eat meat (carnivorous).
The Triceratops because it has three horns on it's face.
A triceratops is a dinosaur that had a 3 horned face. 2 on it's head and the third one on it's nose.
it was part of the horned dinosaur family but had no horns.
Gryphoceratops was a small ceratopsian belonging to the family Leptoceratopsidae. These small ceratopsians had small frills, but no horns.
The plant eating dinosaur with three horns was the triceratops. It was first seen about 68 million years ago and became extinct about 66 million years ago.
No, because Diplodocus didn't have horns. A horned dinosaur would be match to Triceratops.
triceratops are herbivores. They have 3 big horns in front of their head to protect themselves and their babies from being eaten.They travel with their herds.
she is a protoceratop. dont let people fool you when they say she is a trisaratop becuase she doesnt have any horns and trisaratops should have 3 !
she's a protoceratop. evryone thinks that she is a trisaratop but no just look at her head there is no horns let alone three horns !
Yes, Archaeoceratops was a real dinosaur. It was a primitive type of ceratopsian, or a beaked, herbivorous dinosaur with a frill (most of them had horns, but not all, and Archaeoceratops did not have horns). Unlike most ceratopsians, it walked on two legs. It was only a little more than 3 feet long. They lived in what is now China around 125 million years ago.
As far as I know, there were three types of large ceratopsians that had frills but no horns. They were Pachyrhinosaurus, Vagaceratops, and Achelousaurus.