Henry Fairfield Osborn
Like birds do today, Psittacosaurus (including P. gobiensis), didn't have teeth so that it could chew, and therefor, properly digest, its food. That is where the gizzard stones come in, for both birds and Psittacosaurus. When the gizzard stones are being churned with the food in the stomach of an animal, they break up the food material and make it easier to digest. Psittacosaurus wasn't the only dinosaur to use gastroliths (gizzard stones), either.
Rex's dinosaur is named Ace, meaning "First" or "The Best".
Fossils of the primitive ceratopian Psittacosaurus have been found throughout the entire Early Cretaceous, a duration of 45 million years.
The Alamosaurus was named after the Ojo Alamo in New Mexico. Hope this helped...
No, but there is a dinosaur named Gojirasaurus, for Godzilla's Japanese name.
Psittacosaurus, a small herbivorous dinosaur from the Early Cretaceous period, primarily fed on a diet of plants, including leaves, seeds, and possibly fruits. Its beak-like mouth and teeth were adapted for grasping and processing tough vegetation. Fossil evidence suggests that it may have also consumed some softer materials, such as flowers or ferns, indicating a varied diet suited to different habitats.
Max's dinosaur is called Chomp, he is a Triceratops.
The first dinosaur to be described scientifically was Megalosaurus in 1824.
There is no color named "dinosaur." Scientists only know the colors of a few types of feathered dinosaurs, so it wouldn't make sense to name a color after dinosaurs.
no
any dinosaur's baby is called a hatchling.
Dinosaur.