Bonebed

Welcome to the Bonebed Its similar to the Gallery But for various cool fossils and skeletons. Its still extremely unfinished, but not as unfinished as not existing.

Fossils Most Fossil Skeletons in museums are not real bones as Dinosaur fossils are very infrequent. They can only be found in the right conditions, mostly in arid enviorments and less than 1% of animals even reach any point of fossilization. So most museum fossils are cast bones with some occasionally supplementing real bones in some parts of the skeleton. Real fossils will be in the Fossils sections, meanwhile casts will be in the Skeletons section.

This 122-million-year H. lingyuanensis is only 3 inches long; so it died shortly after birth. the odds of this animal managing to have polycaphly and be perfectly perserved  must be at least 1 in 10,000,000,000 or more. Wilo is a Thescelosaurus discovered in 1993 known for having a heart. Inside it's chest research is still ongoing with Wilo 'Elmer S. Riggs’ assistant Menke lying by Brachiosaurus altithorax humerus 1900 Neg CSGEO3934 picture taken by Elmer Riggs, courtesy The Field Museum in Chicago' Notice the bent backbones split apart right bellow the crest This is one of the most well preserved fossils ever, if you look above the tail you can see the bristles, if you look at the stomach you can see it's last meal and the black marks around the bones are actually preserved skin! <a href='https://skeletron8000.neocities.org/Mesozoic/Velociraptor'>Velociraptor</a> <a href='https://skeletron8000.neocities.org/Mesozoic/Protoceratops'>Protoceratops</a> is an Opal like iridescent, nacreous layer that comes from the argon in the shells of ammonites Fernando Escaso, Francisco Ortega, and José Luis Sanz examining the holotype of <a href='https://skeletron8000.neocities.org/Mesozoic/Concavenator'>Concavenator</a> This fossil recieves bounus points because it looks like it's shruging A <a href='https://skeletron8000.neocities.org/Mesozoic/Xiphactinus'>Xiphactinus</a> swallowed a 6 foot Gillicus whole leading to the sill alive with squirming and rupturing it's stomach Inside the guts of this Sinosauropteryx are the bones of a Dalinghosaurus an ancient lizard as well as the aforementioned preserved eggs Parapuzosia seppenradensis diameter 1.80m Inside are 34 young Psittacosaurus around 6 inches long from Northeastern China's Liaoning province Big John is the largest <a href='https://skeletron8000.neocities.org/Mesozoic/Sinosauropteryx'>Sinosauropteryx</a> Triceratops fossil in the world at around 60% complete. With a 75% complete skull preserving damage from previous fights with other Triceratops Big Al is the most famous <a href='https://skeletron8000.neocities.org/Mesozoic/Allosaurus'>Allosaurus</a> in the world at 95% comptlete this A. jimmadseni has sustained many injuries like a set of fractured ribs We don't actually know the fossils gender, but Sue is the most complete <a href='https://skeletron8000.neocities.org/Mesozoic/Tyrannosaurus'>Tyrannosaurus</a> in the world with 90% of the skeleton being found Fossils like these revealed that marine reptile like itchyosaurs gave live birth and they they came out head first. This fossil is an example of a 'coffin birth' where underground pressure pushed the baby out post mortem.

Skeletons

From the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences Photo taken by me. Two Dunkleosteus skulls with a accurate body outline From the Dinosaur Discovery Museum in Kenosha Wisconsin! Suchomimus skeleton fighting a Torvosaurus skeleton. Even thought these two dinosaurs didn't live together if they were to fight my bets are on Torvosaurus, also there's a sneaky <a href='https://skeletron8000.neocities.org/Mesozoic/Carnotaurus'>Carnotaurus</a> in the backround <a href='https://skeletron8000.neocities.org/Mesozoic/Brachiosaurus'>Brachiosaurus</a> with an intresting flag in the backround There is a 4chan post captioned: 'how it just doesn't make any fucking sense' Just goes to show how crazy these animals were. Anyways this was in a convention center in Japan in like 2009 I don't know what happened to this skeleton but I hope he's ok lol Although this is a skeleton of <a href='https://skeletron8000.neocities.org/Mesozoic/Brachiosaurus'>Brachiosaurus</a> Brancai that was later renamed to Giraffatitan, in the backround are <a href='https://skeletron8000.neocities.org/Mesozoic/Kentrosaurus'>Kentrosaurus</a>, Dicraeosaurus, and <a href='https://skeletron8000.neocities.org/Mesozoic/Anurognathus>Diplodocus'>Diplodocus</a>
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