musée

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359 image(s) · 14 Actualités

Galerie d'images

Mosasaurus skeleton; Maastricht Natural History Museum, The Netherlands.
Taxons Mosasaurini

Mosasaurus skeleton; Maastricht Natural History Museum, The Netherlands.

musée Pays-Bas Mosasaurini Mosasaurus +2
Mosasaurus skeleton; Maastricht Natural History Museum, The Netherlands.
Taxons Plotosaurini

Mosasaurus skeleton; Maastricht Natural History Museum, The Netherlands.

musée Pays-Bas Mosasaurini Mosasaurus +2
Collage of three leptoceratopsids, clockwise from top left: Prenoceratops, Montanoceratops and Leptoceratops. These files are already on Commons with their respective licenses. This montage was made for the article Leptoceratopsidae on Wikipedia.
File:The Childrens Museum of Indianapolis - Prenoceratops pieganensis -1.jpg
File:Montanoceratops Royal Tyrrell 1.jpg
File:Leptoceratopsidae - Leptoceratops.JPG
File:Leptoceratops skull Royal Tyrrell.jpg
Taxons Leptoceratopsidae

Collage of three leptoceratopsids, clockwise from top left: Prenoceratops, Montanoceratops and Leptoceratops. These files are already on Commons with their respective licenses. This montage was made for the article Leptoceratopsidae on Wikipedia. File:The Childrens Museum of Indianapolis - Prenoceratops pieganensis -1.jpg File:Montanoceratops Royal Tyrrell 1.jpg File:Leptoceratopsidae - Leptoceratops.JPG File:Leptoceratops skull Royal Tyrrell.jpg

musée Leptoceratops Leptoceratopsidae Montanoceratops +2
Amargasaurus lived in the  Cretaceous Period, about 100 million years ago.Photo taken in Museum of Victoria (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia)
Taxons Dicraeosauridae

Amargasaurus lived in the Cretaceous Period, about 100 million years ago.Photo taken in Museum of Victoria (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia)

musée Australie Crétacé Amargasaurus +2
Amargasaurus lived in the  Cretaceous Period, about 100 million years ago.Photo taken in Museum of Victoria (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia)
Taxons Dicraeosaurinae

Amargasaurus lived in the Cretaceous Period, about 100 million years ago.Photo taken in Museum of Victoria (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia)

musée Australie Crétacé Amargasaurus +2
Shastasaurus (formerly Shonisaurus) sikkanniensis at The Royal Tyrrell Museum.
Taxons Shastasauridae

Shastasaurus (formerly Shonisaurus) sikkanniensis at The Royal Tyrrell Museum.

musée Shastasauria Shastasauridae Shonisauridae +1
Shastasaurus (formerly Shonisaurus) sikkanniensis at The Royal Tyrrell Museum.
Taxons Shonisauridae

Shastasaurus (formerly Shonisaurus) sikkanniensis at The Royal Tyrrell Museum.

musée Shastasauria Shastasauridae Shonisauridae +1
Shastasaurus (formerly Shonisaurus) sikkanniensis at The Royal Tyrrell Museum.
Taxons Shastasauria

Shastasaurus (formerly Shonisaurus) sikkanniensis at The Royal Tyrrell Museum.

musée Shastasauria Shastasauridae Shonisauridae +1
Albertosaurus skull cast (specimen TMP 1981.010.0001) at the Geological Museum in Copenhagen.
Taxons Albertosaurinae

Albertosaurus skull cast (specimen TMP 1981.010.0001) at the Geological Museum in Copenhagen.

musée moulage spécimen Albertosaurinae +2
Hypsilophodon, mounted skeletal cast
Melbourne Museum

Photo: Cas Liber
Taxons Hypsilophodontidae

Hypsilophodon, mounted skeletal cast Melbourne Museum Photo: Cas Liber

musée moulage Hypsilophodon Hypsilophodontidae
Collage of five therizinosaurs, clockwise from top left: Suzhousaurus, Erliansaurus, Nothronychus, Falcarius and Jianchangosaurus. These files are already on Commons with their respective licenses. This montage was made for the article Therizinosauria on Wikipedia.
File:Suzhousaurus megatherioides.JPG
File:Erliansaurus.jpg
File:Nothronychus graffami and Falcarius utahensis - Natural History Museum of Utah - DSC07207.JPG
File:Falcarius.jpg
File:Jianchangosaurus yixianensis.png
Taxons Therizinosauria

Collage of five therizinosaurs, clockwise from top left: Suzhousaurus, Erliansaurus, Nothronychus, Falcarius and Jianchangosaurus. These files are already on Commons with their respective licenses. This montage was made for the article Therizinosauria on Wikipedia. File:Suzhousaurus megatherioides.JPG File:Erliansaurus.jpg File:Nothronychus graffami and Falcarius utahensis - Natural History Museum of Utah - DSC07207.JPG File:Falcarius.jpg File:Jianchangosaurus yixianensis.png

musée Erliansaurus Falcarius Jianchangosaurus +4
Collage of five therizinosaurs, clockwise from top left: Suzhousaurus, Erliansaurus, Nothronychus, Falcarius and Jianchangosaurus. These files are already on Commons with their respective licenses. This montage was made for the article Therizinosauria on Wikipedia.
File:Suzhousaurus megatherioides.JPG
File:Erliansaurus.jpg
File:Nothronychus graffami and Falcarius utahensis - Natural History Museum of Utah - DSC07207.JPG
File:Falcarius.jpg
File:Jianchangosaurus yixianensis.png
Taxons Therizinosauroidea

Collage of five therizinosaurs, clockwise from top left: Suzhousaurus, Erliansaurus, Nothronychus, Falcarius and Jianchangosaurus. These files are already on Commons with their respective licenses. This montage was made for the article Therizinosauria on Wikipedia. File:Suzhousaurus megatherioides.JPG File:Erliansaurus.jpg File:Nothronychus graffami and Falcarius utahensis - Natural History Museum of Utah - DSC07207.JPG File:Falcarius.jpg File:Jianchangosaurus yixianensis.png

musée Erliansaurus Falcarius Jianchangosaurus +4
Mounted replica of a composite skeleton of Edmontosaurus annectens on display at the University of Oxford Museum, Oxford, England. The original skeleton is compiled from disarticulated fossil bones from a bonebed of the Hell Creek Formation, exposed in the Ruth Mason Quarry in Harding County, South Dakota. It is 8.5 m (28 ft.) long and the skull is almost 1 m (39 in.) in length.[1][2]


↑ Dinosaurs in the Museum. Oxford University Museum of Natural History (brochure, PDF), p. 7

↑ BHI Fossil Replica Catalog 2012. Black Hills Institute of Geological Research, Inc., Hill City, SD, 2012 (PDF), p. 22
Taxons Edmontosaurini

Mounted replica of a composite skeleton of Edmontosaurus annectens on display at the University of Oxford Museum, Oxford, England. The original skeleton is compiled from disarticulated fossil bones from a bonebed of the Hell Creek Formation, exposed in the Ruth Mason Quarry in Harding County, South Dakota. It is 8.5 m (28 ft.) long and the skull is almost 1 m (39 in.) in length.[1][2] ↑ Dinosaurs in the Museum. Oxford University Museum of Natural History (brochure, PDF), p. 7 ↑ BHI Fossil Replica Catalog 2012. Black Hills Institute of Geological Research, Inc., Hill City, SD, 2012 (PDF), p. 22

os musée Hell Creek fossile +10
Mounted replica of a composite skeleton of Edmontosaurus annectens on display at the University of Oxford Museum, Oxford, England. The original skeleton is compiled from disarticulated fossil bones from a bonebed of the Hell Creek Formation, exposed in the Ruth Mason Quarry in Harding County, South Dakota. It is 8.5 m (28 ft.) long and the skull is almost 1 m (39 in.) in length.[1][2]


↑ Dinosaurs in the Museum. Oxford University Museum of Natural History (brochure, PDF), p. 7

↑ BHI Fossil Replica Catalog 2012. Black Hills Institute of Geological Research, Inc., Hill City, SD, 2012 (PDF), p. 22
Taxons Kritosaurini

Mounted replica of a composite skeleton of Edmontosaurus annectens on display at the University of Oxford Museum, Oxford, England. The original skeleton is compiled from disarticulated fossil bones from a bonebed of the Hell Creek Formation, exposed in the Ruth Mason Quarry in Harding County, South Dakota. It is 8.5 m (28 ft.) long and the skull is almost 1 m (39 in.) in length.[1][2] ↑ Dinosaurs in the Museum. Oxford University Museum of Natural History (brochure, PDF), p. 7 ↑ BHI Fossil Replica Catalog 2012. Black Hills Institute of Geological Research, Inc., Hill City, SD, 2012 (PDF), p. 22

os musée Hell Creek fossile +10
Mounted replica of a composite skeleton of Edmontosaurus annectens on display at the University of Oxford Museum, Oxford, England. The original skeleton is compiled from disarticulated fossil bones from a bonebed of the Hell Creek Formation, exposed in the Ruth Mason Quarry in Harding County, South Dakota. It is 8.5 m (28 ft.) long and the skull is almost 1 m (39 in.) in length.[1][2]


↑ Dinosaurs in the Museum. Oxford University Museum of Natural History (brochure, PDF), p. 7

↑ BHI Fossil Replica Catalog 2012. Black Hills Institute of Geological Research, Inc., Hill City, SD, 2012 (PDF), p. 22
Taxons Saurolophini

Mounted replica of a composite skeleton of Edmontosaurus annectens on display at the University of Oxford Museum, Oxford, England. The original skeleton is compiled from disarticulated fossil bones from a bonebed of the Hell Creek Formation, exposed in the Ruth Mason Quarry in Harding County, South Dakota. It is 8.5 m (28 ft.) long and the skull is almost 1 m (39 in.) in length.[1][2] ↑ Dinosaurs in the Museum. Oxford University Museum of Natural History (brochure, PDF), p. 7 ↑ BHI Fossil Replica Catalog 2012. Black Hills Institute of Geological Research, Inc., Hill City, SD, 2012 (PDF), p. 22

os musée Hell Creek fossile +10
Mounted replica of a composite skeleton of Edmontosaurus annectens on display at the University of Oxford Museum, Oxford, England. The original skeleton is compiled from disarticulated fossil bones from a bonebed of the Hell Creek Formation, exposed in the Ruth Mason Quarry in Harding County, South Dakota. It is 8.5 m (28 ft.) long and the skull is almost 1 m (39 in.) in length.[1][2]


↑ Dinosaurs in the Museum. Oxford University Museum of Natural History (brochure, PDF), p. 7

↑ BHI Fossil Replica Catalog 2012. Black Hills Institute of Geological Research, Inc., Hill City, SD, 2012 (PDF), p. 22
Taxons Saurolophinae

Mounted replica of a composite skeleton of Edmontosaurus annectens on display at the University of Oxford Museum, Oxford, England. The original skeleton is compiled from disarticulated fossil bones from a bonebed of the Hell Creek Formation, exposed in the Ruth Mason Quarry in Harding County, South Dakota. It is 8.5 m (28 ft.) long and the skull is almost 1 m (39 in.) in length.[1][2] ↑ Dinosaurs in the Museum. Oxford University Museum of Natural History (brochure, PDF), p. 7 ↑ BHI Fossil Replica Catalog 2012. Black Hills Institute of Geological Research, Inc., Hill City, SD, 2012 (PDF), p. 22

os musée Hell Creek fossile +10
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Actualités

Ce « crocodile terroriste » de 31 pieds mangeait des dinosaures. Maintenant c'est de retour
prédateur musée États-Unis Dinosauria squelette
Un énorme « crocodile terroriste » de la taille d’un bus qui s’attaquait autrefois aux dinosaures a été ramené à la vie avec des détails époustouflants grâce au premier squelette complet scientifiquement précis de Deinosuchus schwimmeri. S'étendant sur plus de 9 mètres de long, cet ancien prédateur suprême régnait sur le sud-est des États-Unis il y a plus de 75 millions d'années. Les visiteurs peuvent désormais le voir de près au Tellus Science Museum, le seul endroit au monde à posséder cette réplique.
15/04/2026 sciencedaily ⚙ Traduction automatique
Cet étrange serpent ancien se cachait dans un musée depuis des décennies
os musée fossile découverte
Un étrange petit fossile de serpent trouvé sur la côte sud de l’Angleterre a enfin révélé ses secrets, plus de 40 ans après sa découverte. Le nouveau Paradoxophidion richardoweni vivait il y a environ 37 millions d’années, à une époque où la Grande-Bretagne était plus chaude et regorgeait de reptiles. Bien que connu uniquement à partir de minuscules os de la colonne vertébrale, ce « serpent paradoxal » présente un mélange surprenant de traits observés chez les serpents modernes, le plaçant près des racines mêmes du groupe de serpents le plus diversifié d’aujourd’hui.
31/12/2025 sciencedaily ⚙ Traduction automatique
Cet os rare résout enfin le mystère du Nanotyrannus
os croissance musée fossile spécimen Nanotyrannus Tyrannosaurus découverte
Les scientifiques ont confirmé que Nanotyrannus était une espèce mature et non un jeune T. rex. Un examen microscopique de son os hyoïde a fourni la preuve clé, correspondant aux signaux de croissance observés dans les spécimens connus de T. rex. Cette découverte suggère un écosystème de tyrannosaures plus riche et plus compétitif qu’on ne le pensait auparavant. Il montre également comment les fossiles de musée et les analyses de pointe peuvent réécrire l’histoire préhistorique.
09/12/2025 sciencedaily ⚙ Traduction automatique
Langebaanweg Partie 3 – Une archive animale
musée fossile
Bien que nous ayons discuté de l'importance du Langebaanweg en termes de sa position géologique et de son histoire, ce qui le rend vraiment célèbre est l'incroyable taille et la diversité de son assemblage de fossiles. Au cours des 60 dernières années, les collections du musée Iziko du Cap ont été remplies d'un [&hellip
22/08/2025 palaeocast ⚙ Traduction automatique
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