Moros intrepidus was a small tyrannosauroid from North America. It recently appeared in however, like it appears to be a bit on the small side.

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Dino Fact!

Guanlong (Crown Dragon) is a tyrannosauroid from Late Jurassic China! Its name comes from the distinct head crest! The two currently known skeletons are of an adult and juvenile and from them, we know that the crest grew larger- (1/2)

Art by jackthevulture!

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Dino Fact!

Bistahieversor (Bistahi Destroyer) is a tyrannosauroid from Late Cretaceous New Mexico! Similar to Teratophoneus, it lived farther south than most North American tyrannosaurs and it also had a fairly short and deep snout! Studies- (1/2)

Art by Joschua Knüppe!

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Timurlengia, an early tyrannosauroid that helped show the world that brains were initially more important than brawn for tyrannosaurs. Maybe there’s a lesson here.

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Some selected Tyrannosauroids

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So, these are the three pieces I did for the Tyrannosauroid series by Beast of the Mesozoic: Daspletosaurus, Proceratosaurus and Lythronax

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be more similar to ornithomimids than to other Late Cretaceous tyrannosauroids. Second image is a silhouette of M.intrepidus showing recovered elements. Isolated indet. tyrannosauroid premaxillary tooth (NCSM 33393) recovered from nearby strata in (d) occlusal, (e) mesiodistal,

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THE KING OF THE DINOSAURS!
(And my favorite dinosaur/animal)

Tyrannosaurus rex

(Based on the skeletals by Scott Hartman and Matt Dempsey, and the muscular diagram by Matt Dempsey)

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Plus A Gobihadros mongoliensis(of course not Tyrannosauroids https://t.co/d21zDIaQjf

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More Tyrannosauroids for 700+ followers:
1.Albertosaurus sarcophagus;
2.Suskityrannus hazelae
3.Yutyrannus huali
4.Dilong paradoxus

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Day 5 the Guanlong! A proceratosaurid tyrannosauroid from the late Jurassic, it was much smaller than its more well known descendant, the T-Rex. Drew some inspiration from Turkeys on this one with abit of extra flair.

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So this has been something I worked on for the last 2 months, a size chart showing the diversity of the Tyrannosauroidea, a pretty fascinating family of theropods.
Also wanted to show off different integument possibilities.

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Given the uncertain position for Megaraptorans in the theropod family tree, I added some feathers. Either it's a reduced basal coelurosaurian/tyrannosauroid feather coat or it's speculative filaments developed in derived allosauroids, take yer pick

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Happy Here’s something I haven’t done in a while.

Yutyrannus huali, a giant, feathery Tyrannosauroid from the (sometimes snowy) Yixian Formation. It was a pack hunter, probably living in small family units.

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Guanlong was a genus of small tyrannosauroids from the Late Jurassic of China. They measured 3 metres in length.

(Credit: durbed)

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The foot bones of Moros were extremely slender, with metatarsal proportions more similar to ornithomimids than to other Late Cretaceous tyrannosauroids.

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A reminder that and I once published an annotated chart on tyrannosauroid evolution in a magazine. And a reminder that I've still never even seen a copy, because the publishers never sent me one and I never saw it on sale in a shop :(

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A quick sketch of a crouching and curious Eotyrannus lengi, and English Tyrannosauroid, while I am watching England win 6 - 0 against Panama!

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a small, european tyrannosauroid in alert position. https://t.co/nHiWHjNBxR

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