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Ankylosaurus

Ankylosaurus was
named by Barnum Brown in 1908 and is known from three fairly complete
specimens from Alberta, Wyoming and Hell Creek formation in Montana.
Ankylosaur trackways have also been found near Sucre in Bolivia, South
America. Its fossil remains are restricted to rocks from the Cretaceous
period.
Ankylosaurus was a "bird-hipped" dinosaur from the
heavily armoured group known as the ankylosaurs. Much of its skeleton
was fused together to produce a heavily plated back. Its head had robust
triangular horns in each corner. Its skull was nearly 1 metre long, very
broad but very thick leaving little room for a brain.
Ankylosaurus was one of the larger armoured
dinosaurs. It's club-like tail, the most impressive part of its body,
was made of large clumps of bony tissue fused to the tail vertebrae and
encased in tough reptilian skin. Its muscular tail was flexible and able
to swing the club powerfully from side to side. Ankylosaurus was
not built to reach upwards and grazed on low-lying plants.
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