Many types of ceratopsians would fit this description. The most famous is Triceratops.
Three, one each above its eyes and one nose horn.
Ah, what a majestic creature you're thinking of, my friend! That sounds like the mighty Triceratops. With its strong four legs and distinctive horns, it roamed the ancient lands with grace and power. Keep exploring the wonderful world of dinosaurs, and let your imagination run wild with these incredible beings!
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.
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.
The horns above each eye on a Triceratops were about three feet long. The nose horn was about half that length.
diplodocus was long
They are not tusks, they are horns. Mature male horns may reach about 3-4 feet long if the horn was straight, mature ewe horns may be about 2 feet long.
Argentinosaurus was the biggest hervivorous dinosaur that has a long neck.
the bighorn has big horns and the longhorn has long horns
in some species female chameleons grow minimal horns or no horns at all. some females horns are 12-14 inches long while males can grow up to 14 inches long
80cm
Zebra