How It Works-Book Of Dinosaurs

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Plesiosaurs were part of marine
ecolog y from the late Triassic period
to the end of the Cretaceous period
and were powerful swimmers that could strike
fast-moving prey with efficiency. Plesiosaurs
t ypically had a stock y torso, four large flippers,
a long neck and a small skull with small,
pointed teeth and one such example was the

Plesiosaurus, which inhabited the shallow seas
of Europe during the early Jurassic period.
Measuring any where between 3-5 meters in
length, the Plesiosaurus was one of the ver y
first prehistoric reptiles to be discovered and
the fossil remains pointed ver y much towards a
powerful creature that was build to cope with
its precise fish-catching feeding habits. With a

for ward burst of the flippers on one side of its
body coupled with back wards thrust of the
flippers on the other side could turn the
Plesiosaurus on a sixpence, its relatively weak,
stumpy tail acting as a rudder to steer it. It was
such agilit y that the helped the plesiosaurs
dominate the ecosystem as no unsuspecting
fish would have been able to escape it.

DINOSAURS


Marine reptiles


Marine reptiles


Discover the creatures that ruled and dominated the prehistoric waters


These powerful reptiles were ever y inch the aquatic version of a dinosaur


Plesiosaurs


Pliosaurs were large carnivorous marine
reptiles that mainly inhabited the waters
around Europe in the Jurassic and
Cretaceous periods. Their diet consisted of fish,
sea-based dinosaurs and other marine reptiles.
The two most well known varieties of pliosaur
are the Kronosaurus and the Liopleurodon. The
Kronosaurus was known to have stalked the seas
around Australia and South America in the late
Cretaceous period and measured up to nine
meters (30ft) in length. Liopleurodons measured a
colossal 12 meters (39ft) in length. Resembling a
whale, it was a highly manoeuvrable creature
that was capable of swimming at all depths.

These marine reptiles were built to hunt deep


Pliosaurs


Teeth
Teeth were small and
pointed, all the better for
grasping on to wriggling
fish and squid

Tail
Liopleurodon’s tail was
rather short and probably
not very useful for rudder-
like steering

Neck
The Plesiosaur’s long
neck had great
manoeuvrability for
catching darting fish

Flippers
Large fore and hind
flippers were integral to
underwater propulsion

Teeth
Liopleurodon teeth could
reach up to 10cm (4in) in
length. That’s the size of a
Swiss Army knife

Body
Despite its massive size
and bulk, Liopleuodon
was quite streamlined for
underwater hunting

Flippers
Four large flippers helped
Liopluerodon (one of the
most well known
Pliosaurs) cruise along

Pliosaur
Length: 10-12m (32-48ft)
Weight: 45,000kg (99,000lb)
Diet: Carnivore
Discovered: Dorset, UK

The statistics...


Plesiosaur
Length: 4.5m (15ft)
Weight: 90kg (200lb)
Diet: Carnivore
Discovered: Dorset, UK

The statistics...

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