This skeleton is the largest dinosaur bone fossil ever discovered in Japan.
According to scientists, these are the 70 million-year-old dinosaur footprints believed to live in a swarm of duckbills and are sheltering in the forests of Alaska.
Canadian media reported on November 7 that the country's construction workers have discovered the fossil of a duckbill dinosaur in the city of Leduc, south of the capital of
Pauk Els physiologist, Wulongong University (New South Wales state, Australia) affirmed that dinosaurs are like modern breast-feeding mammals.
An analysis of the fossil's inner composition of an unusually well-preserved small dinosaur showed that the last meal included a lot of thoroughly chewed and digested leaves.