

Whoa! Congrats!



Whoa! Congrats!



Full skulls from Saurpods are fairly rare, since they are so fragile. They are huge animals though. Camarasaurus was much taller than the largest predator at the time (Allosaurus). They were up to like 70 feet long, and 30ish tons. Allosaurus was 30 feet long (still long), but only 2-3 tons. A full grown Camarasaurus would probably just fine. Young ones would be very vulnerable (but they did grow SUPER fast compared to mammals)
Amazing find!


It was very exciting. I’m hoping to do more volunteering of that sort again.


Agreed. It’s mind blowing


Camarasaurus has large teeth for a Sauropod. They are like little shovels. This one was worn down quite a bit, so the Paelo on site said it was likely an older adult:


You can see a skull of one here for reference:



The Tyrrell is exactly the museum I’m after. Thank you for the further recommendations!


I have not been up to Alberta yet. I’ve been wanting to take my son


Camarasaurus, because I found a tooth of one while volunteering on a dig site




Ankies rock! Check out this mummified then petrified Nodosaur (a type of Ankylosaur)
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https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/mummified-armored-dinosaur-makes-its-debut-1-180963311/


Plus this dude in the hat

I live about 10 miles from where the first Stegosaurus was found, which also means there was Apatosaurus, Camarasaurus, Allosaurus, T. Rex, Triceratops, Brontosaurus/Brachiosaurus, etc


I think they are on Flying/Air type at the moment


Anyone running on a “Socialized Tamales” platform would eternally have my vote


And college too!


I think that’s called “Heisenberg’s Uncertain SQL Injection Principle”



(one of my favorite memes)


It’s just like using MongoDB instead of a structured database!
The quote is referring to Sean O’Brien