Pachyrhinosaurus (meaning "thick-nosed lizard") is a genus of ceratopsid dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous period of North America.
7m.
Use those directions on the note to find a pachyrhinosaurus.
Pachyrhinosaurus Anchiceratops Pentaceratops Centrosaurus Achelousaurus Styracosaurus Diceratops Torosaurus
Ceratopsians are a group of herbivorous, beaked dinosaurs with frills and often horns. There were many types of ceratopsian. Here are just a few: Triceratops Anchiceratops Torosaurus Styracosaurus Bagaceratops Protoceratops Einiosaurus Udanoceratops Graciliceratops Pachyrhinosaurus Leptoceratops
As far as I know, there were three types of large ceratopsians that had frills but no horns. They were Pachyrhinosaurus, Vagaceratops, and Achelousaurus.
Yes, Pachyrhinosaurus was a herbivorous dinosaur. It primarily fed on various types of vegetation, such as leaves and shrubs, using its beak-like mouth to strip foliage. Its robust skull and unique features, including a large nasal horn, suggest adaptations for browsing on plants.
Albertasaurus was a large, meat eating dinosaur closely related to T-rex but they lived a couple million years earlier. They would have hunted herbivorous dinosaurs such as Edmontosaurus, Saurolophus, and Hypacrosaurus.
pond turtle pignose turtle plated lizard pipe snake python pit viper
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
Alberta Canada is a great place to check our dinosaur fossils. Pipestone Creek Pachyrhinosaurus bonebed is a mass grave about 73 million years old, and contains many fossils of Ceratopsians which may have traveled in herds. They have a 1,553 mile trail that is a UNESCO World Heritage site.http://www.tyrrellmuseum.com/exhibits/alberta_fossil_trail.htm
The Triceratops lived in the Cretaceous period, dinosaurs belonging to that period include Tyrannosaurus, Ankylosaurus, Velociraptor, Giganotosaurus, Argentinosaurus and many, many, many more.
the troodon, t-rex , lambeosaurus, triceritops,anklyosaurus albertaceratops,stegoceras these ain't the half of it go to http://traumador.blogspot.com/2009/01/albertas-dinosaurs.html