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This illustration reveals Brontosaurus as researchers see it today, with a Diplodocus-like head. Davide Bonadonna, Milan, Italy. Creative commons license CC- BY NC SA ...
Top illustration: Charles P. Knight (1897) Sauropods, the suborder to which both Brontosaurus and Apatosaurus belong, are among the most recognizable dinosaurs.
Brontosaurus (foreground) and Diplodocus depicted by Charles R Knight in 1897 (Wikimedia commons) A new paper gives hope to fans of The Land Before Time. As it turns out, the brontosaurus might ...
O.C. Marsh, the famous 19th-century paleontologist and founder of the Peabody Museum, had been the architect of the latter interpretation, basing his illustrations of the dinosaur's head on skull ...
The original AMNH mount of Brontosaurus, reconstructed in 1905 Image from Wikipedia “Brontosaurus” will always be special to me. The shuffling, swamp-dwelling dinosaur never really existed ...
The brontosaurus may finally be reinstated as a dinosaur more than a century after the name was stripped ... An apatosaurus is depicted in this undated illustration. De Agostini/Getty ...
Illustration by Natalie Matthews-Ramo. ... The Kindly Brontosaurus once politely ushered me past a queue of about 1,000 people to get into a sardine-packed celebrity reading at the Union Square ...
An inaccurate illustration of a Brontosaurus (nowadays called Apatosaurus), 1897. The idea that Apatosaurus was wholly or mostly aquatic is now considered outdated.
Michael D'Emic is a paleontologist, research instructor at Stony Brook University, and research associate at the Burpee Museum of Natural History. When I first tell someone I’m a paleontologist ...
Brontosaurus was believed to be an Apatosaurus mistakenly classified as a new species.) The long-necked, long-tailed, 30-ton Brontosaurus is one of the most famous dinosaurs of all time.
The Brontosaurus has been officially classed as a dinosaur again. The “thunder lizard” has been proved as a species in its own right. Loulla-Mae Eleftheriou-Smith. Tuesday 07 April 2015 16:41 BST.
Brontosaurus, the long-necked plant-eating dinosaur, has always been a classroom favorite. Never mind that it was declassified as a genus all its own in 1903 and lumped under the name Apatosaurus.