Triceratops: The Three-Horned Titan of the Cretaceous

Walk into any natural history museum and there’s a good chance Triceratops is near the entrance. Not because it’s the largest dinosaur or the most dangerous — but because its silhouette does something almost no other extinct animal can: it registers immediately, even to someone who couldn’t name another species. That recognition is earned. The … Read more

Giganotosaurus: The Southern Giant That Challenged T. rex

Ask most people to name the largest carnivorous dinosaur and you’ll get T. rex nine times out of ten. That’s cultural momentum at work, not necessarily the science. Because 30 million years before Tyrannosaurus turned up in North America, something comparable in size — and arguably more interesting anatomically — was already at the top … Read more

Parasaurolophus: The Graceful Crested Dinosaur of the Cretaceous

There’s a tendency in dinosaur coverage to treat herbivores as supporting cast. They’re the prey. The backdrop. The reason predators have something to chase. That framing misses a lot — and no animal makes that clearer than Parasaurolophus. The Parasaurolophus dinosaur was a 30-foot hadrosaur with a five-foot hollow crest sweeping back from its skull, … Read more

Maiasaura: The Nurturing Dinosaur That Redefined Prehistoric Parenthood

Most people think of dinosaurs as killing machines. Teeth, claws, destruction — that’s the image that sells movie tickets. But one dinosaur spent 76 million years proving that the most effective survival strategy wasn’t aggression. It was showing up for your kids. Meet Maiasaura peeblesorum — the “good mother lizard.” No fearsome teeth. No armored … Read more