Pteranodon (3D animated model)

Pteranodon (3D animated model)

Pteranodon (scientific name: Pteranodon) is a pterosaur belonging to the order Pterosauria and the family Pteranodontidae. There are no teeth in the mouth and the wingspan is 7 to 9 meters. It lived during the Late Cretaceous, approximately 100 to 65 million years ago, and its fossils have been found in Kansas, USA, and the United Kingdom. Pteranodon fed on fish and inhabited the coastal regions of the Western Interior Seaway in North America. It appeared in the Jurassic film series.
Anglo-protoratops (3D animated model)

Anglo-protoratops (3D animated model)

An's protoceratops is a dinosaur of the protoceratops family. Fossils were found in the Upper Cretaceous strata of the Bayinzak Basin, Gobi, Mongolia. From 1921 to 1930, the United States New York Museum of Natural History expedition team in Mongolia "flame cliff" collected its specimens. The species is about 2 meters long, has no horn on the head but has a small protrusion on the nasal bone, a neck shield covering the neck, teeth reserved at the front end of the mouth, short limbs and stout trunk. It belongs to the original member of the horned dragon and is a close relative of the triceratops. It existed in the Gobi desert environment of Kampanjie about 75 million years ago. The local terrain is rugged and rich in biodiversity.
Pachycephalosaurus (3D animation model)

Pachycephalosaurus (3D animation model)

Pachycephalosaurus is a dinosaur belonging to the order Ornithischia and the family Pachycephalosauridae within the class Reptilia. Pachycephalosaurus, also known as the thick-headed dinosaur, sports a skull adorned with thick bony plates that can exceed 20 centimeters in thickness and rise high in a prominent dome, resembling a tumor—hence its scientific name, which literally means “lizard with a thick head.” Pachycephalosaurus measured 4 to 6 meters in length and weighed between 0.5 and 4 tons. Its head was adorned with numerous bony knobs, and some individuals even bore large, sharp spikes at the rear of the skull.
Fragile allosaurus (3D animated model)

Fragile allosaurus (3D animated model)

Allosaurus is one of the most famous large carnivorous dinosaurs, occupying the apex of the food chain in Late Jurassic terrestrial ecosystems; its type species, Allosaurus fragilis, was named by the great American paleontologist Othniel C. Marsh in the 20th century. Marsh described and named it in 1877. They also account for the largest number of fossil discoveries from the Late Jurassic. Adult Allosaurus could reach lengths of up to 9 meters, with some specimens believed to have attained as much as 12 meters. At the same time, the number of Allosaurus specimens far exceeds that of Tyrannosaurus rex, making it one of the most thoroughly studied dinosaurs by paleontologists. Due to the extraordinarily large number of fossils unearthed, Allosaurus has become the iconic fossil species of the Morrison Formation.
Tyrannosaurus Rex (3D animated model)

Tyrannosaurus Rex (3D animated model)

Tyrannosaurus belongs to the genus Tyrannosaurus within the superfamily Tyrannosauroidea and is the type species of that genus. It was described and named in 1905 by the American paleontologist Henry Fairfield Osborn, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. If one were to follow the transliteration conventions used for other dinosaur species names, its specific epithet would be more appropriately rendered as “King Tyrannosaurus.” Late Cretaceous: body length 10–13 meters, body weight 7.5–10 tons.
Sliding tooth dragon (3D animated model)

Sliding tooth dragon (3D animated model)

The tropodon was a marine reptile whose stout figures roamed around in the Late Jurassic driven by four medium-sized paddle fins. The long jaws of the sliding-toothed dragon are full of sharp teeth. The structure of the nasal cavity allows it to smell in the water, so that it can detect the whereabouts of its prey from a long distance. In addition to having to float and breathe, the skyodosaurs spend their lives in the water, so they are also oviparous animals and like to give birth in shallow waters.
Fiber Hornstrone (3D animated model)

Fiber Hornstrone (3D animated model)

Hornosaurus is a genus of herbivorous dinosaurs in the lower order Hornosauridae. Its body length is about 2 meters, its weight is between 68 and 200 kilograms, and its head has a parrot-like sharp beak, belonging to the primitive Ceratosaurus. The model species is a slender hornophorus, which is currently recognized as the only effective species. The species lived in the late Cretaceous in western North America, and the fossils were distributed in Alberta, Canada and Wyoming, and inhabited by Triceratops and others at the same time. It feeds on ferns, cycads and early flowering plants, cutting plant leaves through its beak.
Bird Dragon (3D animated model)

Bird Dragon (3D animated model)

Iguanosaurus (scientific name: Iguanodon, meaning "the teeth of the iguana") belongs to the class of Iguanosaurus ornithischus. Iguanosaurus is a large ornithopod dinosaur, about 9 to 10 meters long and 4 to 5 meters high. It has a pointed claw on the front thumb, which may be used to resist predators. They lived mainly in the Jurassic and Cretaceous period (65 million -0.2 billion years ago) of large dinosaurs. Hindlimb developed, erect height of about 5 meters, from the head to the tail tip length of 11 meters. The tail is thick and heavy and plays a balancing role. Vegetarian with a long tongue and sharp teeth serrated for tearing and chopping leaves.
Southern Behemoth Dragon (3D animated model)

Southern Behemoth Dragon (3D animated model)

There is only one species of southern behemoth dragon, which is the southern behemoth dragon, a large theropod dinosaur found in Argentina. It lived in the late Cretaceous Senoman period, about 97 million years ago. The southern giant dragon belongs to the class of sharkodontosaurids in the family allosauridae, and is probably the largest land predator in the history of the earth. Compared with Tyrannosaurus rex, the sample size of the southern behemoth is very small, and the integrity of the large individual specimens is very poor, so it is quite difficult to accurately estimate its body size. Who is bigger than Tyrannosaurus Rex is also a topic of debate in academia.
Erlian raptor (3D animated model)

Erlian raptor (3D animated model)

Megalopaptor (Gigantoraptor), is one of the members of the egg-stealing dragon (oviraptorosaurs) family. The giant raptor is twice as tall as the human body, weighs 1.5 tons, and has a turtle-like beak. This huge bird-like dinosaur was discovered by Xu Xing and his colleagues in Inner Mongolia in 2005. It is also the largest feathered dinosaur ever discovered.
Heterodon (3D animated model)

Heterodon (3D animated model)

Heterodentosaurus, also known as Heterodentosaurus and Echinosaurus, is a mammal-like carnivore that lived in the Permian. Heterodontosaurus is relatively close to mammals and far from dinosaurs, lizards, birds, etc. Its fossils are in North America and Europe. Heterodontosaurus is a carnivorous paleontology of the Permian period. The general public associate heterodontosaurus with dinosaurs, but heterodontosaurus is not actually a dinosaur. More precisely, they are classified as Panosauria. Although it looks like a lizard, the relationship between heterodentosaurus and mammals is closer and farther away from true reptiles (such as dinosaurs, lizards, birds, etc.).
Deinonychus (3D animation model)

Deinonychus (3D animation model)

Deinonychus is a dromaeosaurid dinosaur discovered in North America, with a body length reaching 3 to 4 meters. Although this figure is markedly smaller than that of other large theropod dinosaurs, it is significantly larger than that of other dromaeosaurids. The name “Deinonychus” is derived from the large, sickle-shaped claw on the second toe of the foot; later research has shown that this feature is widespread among dromaeosaurids and troodontids. The morphological description of Deinonychus was published in the late 1960s. Its discovery overturned prevailing notions about dinosaurs, demonstrating that they were not cold-blooded, lumbering “giant lizards”; rather, some were small and highly active.
Da-style turon (3D animated model)

Da-style turon (3D animated model)

Da-style turosaurus, also known as Dasbrosaurus, Evil Tyrannosaurus or Dumbosaurus, is a large carnivorous dinosaur in the family Tyrannosauridae and Tyrannosauridae. The adult body length can reach 10 meters, the average weight is 4 tons, and the largest individual can exceed 6 tons. The skull is about 1.1 meters long and has more than 60 D-shaped anterior maxillary teeth. The proportion of forelimbs is relatively long in Tyrannosauridae, and the hind limbs are strong. According to the study of hodeshlon, its face may be covered with flat scales that are sensitive to touch. There are currently two valid species: the robust Dasbrillon and the Horn's phylosaurus, in addition to unnamed specimens, such as the tentatively named "superphylosaurus" individuals weighing up to 7.5 tons.
Open-horns (3D animated model)

Open-horns (3D animated model)

Cockerosaurus is a herbivorous dinosaur of the genus Cockerosaurus of the ornithopterosaurus family. Its Latin name means "open and split reptile", and it is also known as Gasperosaurus and Cracerosaurus. Its body length is 4.8-6 meters, its weight is 3.6 tons, its head shield is wide and heart-shaped with holes, its nose has short corners, and its frontal horn length varies by sex. The dorsum has a tumor-like protrusion 5cm in diameter, and the neck fold leaf structure is longer than that of Triceratops. The known species include Billerosaurus, Canadian killerosaurus, etc. Some fossils have been classified as agouhaerosaurus. The species lived in Late Cretaceous North America, and most fossils were found in Alberta, Canada.
Camarasaurus (3D animated model)

Camarasaurus (3D animated model)

Camarasaurus (scientific name: Camarasaurus) is a herbivorous sauropod dinosaur of the genus Camarasaurus of the family Camarasaurus. The type species is Supreme Camarasaurus. Its body length can reach 18 meters and its weight is about 30 tons. It has strong body characteristics, short neck and tail, arch structure of head, spoon-shaped teeth and periodic replacement ability. There is cavity structure in vertebrae to reduce weight. Small pit marks were found on the surface of the jawbone, which may indicate the presence of blood vessels in the rostral tissue.
Brachiosaurus (3D animated model)

Brachiosaurus (3D animated model)

Brachiosaurus is a general term for the "Brachiosaurus" dinosaurs of the Jurassic period. The body length is 25 meters, the height is 15 meters, the weight is 30 tons, the tail is thick and short, the head is very small, the neck is very long, and the shape is similar to that of a giraffe. There are large claws on the inner side of the foreruns. The jaw is well developed, covered with 52 teeth up and down, and the edges of the teeth are sharp. The limbs are thick and strong. The nostrils are on top of the head. It is named for its long forelimbs.
The allosaurus (3D animated model)

The allosaurus (3D animated model)

The allosaurus is one of the most famous large carnivorous dinosaurs, occupying the top of the food chain of the Late Jurassic terrestrial ecosystem. Marsh described the naming in 1877. They are also the largest number of fossils found in the Late Jurassic. Adult allosaurs can reach 9 meters in length, with a few individuals thought to reach 12 meters. At the same time, the number of specimens of allosaurus is far more than that of tyrannosaurus rex, making it one of the most thoroughly studied dinosaurs by paleontologists. Due to the extremely large number of fossils excavated, allosaurus has become an iconic fossil species of the Morrison Formation.
Albertolon (3D animated model)

Albertolon (3D animated model)

Albertolosaurus was one of the earliest members of the family Tyrannosaurus, and was known to have a maximum length of 11 meters. Its fossils were unearthed in Alberto, Canada. Albertolosaurus was a bipedal hunting dinosaur with a large head, a jawbone with many large teeth and a thin forelimb with two fingers. It could be at the top of the ecosystem food chain. Although larger in theropod, Albertolon was smaller than its famous relative, Tyrannosaurus, and weighed about the same as today's black rhinoceros.
High Spinosaurus (3D animated model)

High Spinosaurus (3D animated model)

Spinosaurus is a large carnivorous dinosaur found in North America, with a body length of up to 11 meters. It belongs to the shark-toothed dinosaur in the Allosauridae superfamily. Its fossils are mainly found in Texas, Wyoming and Oklahoma in the United States. Fossils of its teeth have also been found in Maryland, suggesting that this top predator was once widespread on the North American continent. There is only one species of Acanthosaurus, Atoka Acanthosaurus. The survival time of high echinopus is from the Aptian period to the early Albu period of the early Cretaceous. High Spinosaurus was the largest predator in the ecosystem at the time, preying mainly on bird-breasts and giant sauropods.
Tyrannosaurus Rex (3D animated model)

Tyrannosaurus Rex (3D animated model)

Tyrannosaurus belongs to the genus Tyrannosaurus within the superfamily Tyrannosauroidea and is the type species of that genus. It was described and named in 1905 by the American paleontologist Henry Fairfield Osborn, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. If one were to follow the transliteration conventions used for other dinosaur species names, its specific epithet would be more appropriately rendered as “King Tyrannosaurus.” Late Cretaceous: body length 10–13 meters, body weight 7.5–10 tons.
Like a crocodile dragon (3D animated model)

Like a crocodile dragon (3D animated model)

It is a large spinosaurus found in Africa. It is estimated that it can reach 12 meters in length and weigh about 3 tons. At present, there is only one species under this subordinate, namely, the model species Tenere resembles a crocodile. Compared with other spinosaurus, the skeleton of the alligator is relatively intact, making it one of the most clearly studied spinosaurus. The crocodile-like dragon has a long, narrow skull and dense, conical teeth. The vertebral nerve spines of the alligator-like dragon are somewhat extended in the dorsal abdomen, but are not as exaggerated as those of the spinosaurus, and may also support the structure of the dorsal sail like that of the spinosaurus.
Spinosaurus (3D animated model)

Spinosaurus (3D animated model)

Spinosaurus was a large theropod dinosaur, with a body length comparable to that of Tyrannosaurus rex and southern behemoths. There is currently only one effective species under the genus Spinosaurus, the Egyptian Spinosaurus, named by the German paleontologist Stromer in 1915. It is a pity that the positive type specimen of Spinarus was blown up during World War II. For a long time, paleontologists' understanding of Spinosaurus has only been limited to photos of positive specimens and a few fossil fragments. These studies not only made scientists understand the history of Spinosaurus, but also made people realize that in the Mesozoic era, dinosaurs were not only the overlords on land, but also had their place in the water.
Wind God Pterosaur (3D animated model)

Wind God Pterosaur (3D animated model)

Afeng God pterosaur (Quetzalcoatlus) is a pterodactyl, also known as the Pterodactyl. Aeolus pterosaurus (Quetzalcoatlus) is a species of pterodactyl that lived in the late Late Cretaceous (Campanan to Maastricht), about 84 million to 65 million years ago. It is the largest known flying animal. Pterosaurs are advanced and lack of teeth pterosaurs. The origin of the name is the Aztec civilization of the feathered serpent god Queztke (Quetzalcoatl).
Toothless Pterosaur (3D animated model)

Toothless Pterosaur (3D animated model)

The toothless pterosaur (scientific name: Pteranodon) is a pterosaur in the order Pterosauridae, the toothless pterosauridae. There are no teeth in the mouth and the wingspan is 7 to 9 meters. Living in the late Cretaceous period, about 0.1 billion to 65 million years ago, fossils were found in Kansas and England. The toothless pterosaurs fed on fish and inhabited the coast of the inland seaways of western North America. In the Jurassic film series