LiveScience Topic:
Dinosaurs: News & Pictures of Dinosaur Types

Dinosaurs types are many and varied, from small bird-like creatures to the largest animals ever to walk on Earth. The subject of blockbuster films, history museum exhibits and much more, dinosaurs continue to interest people today after first appearing approximately 230 million years ago. These vertebrate animals dominated the land for more than 160 million years before experiencing a catastrophic extinction at the end of the Cretaceous period 65 million years ago. The first dinosaur was recognized in the 19th century and ever since, dinosaurs have been the source of many questions. What contributed to the rapid extinction of the dinosaur? What do the latest fossil findings reveal about the dinosaur and its way of life? How is the modern bird connected to these prehistoric creatures? Could dinosaurs like Tyrannosaurus Rex and Brontosaurus really be brought back to life with mosquito DNA? Inside you'll find dinosaur news & features, along with plenty of pictures.

A Best Western owner in Denver hopes to capitalize on nearby dinosaur fossil sites with a dino-themed hotel.
Quetzalcoatlus weighed around 155 pounds and had a 34-foot wingspan.
Dinosaurs had bumpy skin, similar to the skin of an alligator or a flightless emu bird. But their skin color remains a mystery to paleontologists today.
Dinosaurs earn their names just like Tiny Tim, Andre the Giant and William "The Fridge" Perry.
Dinosaurs definitely didn't have email and text messages to keep in touch with friends, but scientists are quite certain that there was dialogue among the beasts
he scientists say it is the oldest known large-bodied horned dinosaur that was 20 feet long and weighed over 2 tons.
Their takeoff looked much like that of modern-day albatross.
A video simulation of the giant pterosaur, Quetzalcoatlus, taking flight and landing. Their huge size and fragile wings required them to run on a downward-sloping runway before flapping their wings and taking off, and then landing in a similar way.
Both dinos and turkeys have a furcula. Now, what's that?
Bite marks on bones reveal how the Tyrannosaurus may have feasted on a Triceratops.
Signs of injuries detected in pachycephalosaurs' skulls offer evidence the animals head-butted in violent battles.
Learn about T. rex's massive teeth, bones, habitat and other dinosaur secrets.
Armored plant-eater once roamed today's high-tech space campus.
The remains of several new toothy shark species, with at least three dating to 270 million years ago, are found in the desert state.
A new study suggests feathered dinosaurs were more prevalent than thought.
The debate continues: Are dinosaurs warm-blooded, cold-blooded or somewhere in between?
Its arms may have been tinier than tyrannosaurs but it had a ferocious bite.
Tyrannosaurids and abelisaurids had stumpy arms whose purpose stumps scientists.