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Cerapoda Collection (#2)

"Cerapoda: Unveiling the Majestic World of Dinosaurs at Crystal Palace Park" Step into a prehistoric wonderland as you explore the fascinating realm of Cerapoda

Background imageCerapoda Collection: A Torosaurus dinosaur during Earths Cretaceous period

A Torosaurus dinosaur during Earths Cretaceous period

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Confrontation between male Styracosaurus dinosaurs

Confrontation between male Styracosaurus dinosaurs
A pair of male Styracosaurus dinosaurs involved In a territorial clash. The winner also wins the rights to breed with the herds females

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Triceratops dinosaur

Triceratops dinosaur, white background

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Nedoceratops graze beneath a giant Oak Tree

Nedoceratops graze beneath a giant Oak Tree
Nedoceratops (formerly known as Diceratops) graze beneath a giant Oak tree 75 million years ago in what is today Wyoming. The ground birds on the right are from the predatory genus Avisaurus

Background imageCerapoda Collection: An adult Zuniceratops compared to a modern adult White Rhinoceros

An adult Zuniceratops compared to a modern adult White Rhinoceros
An adult Zuniceratops from 90 million years ago is compared to a modern adult White Rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum). The Zuniceratops is 3 feet tall at the shoulder and weighs 250 pounds

Background imageCerapoda Collection: An adult Torosaurus compared to a modern adult White Rhinoceros

An adult Torosaurus compared to a modern adult White Rhinoceros
An adult Torosaurus from 75 million years ago is compared to a modern adult White Rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum). The Torosaurus is 6 and a half feet tall at the shoulder and weighs 10, 000 pounds

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Two Diabloceratops dinosaurs fight for mating rights

Two Diabloceratops dinosaurs fight for mating rights during the Cretaceous Period of Utah, North America

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Zuniceratops dinosaurs drinking water from a river

Zuniceratops dinosaurs drinking water from a river
Two Microraptor birds fly in to join another sitting on an old skeleton as Zuniceratops dinosaurs come down to the river for a drink

Background imageCerapoda Collection: An adult Einiosaurus compared to a modern adult White Rhinoceros

An adult Einiosaurus compared to a modern adult White Rhinoceros
An adult Einiosaurus from 77 million years ago is compared to a modern adult White Rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum). The Einiosaurus is 6 and a half feet tall at the shoulder and weighs 8

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Two Nedoceratops dinosaurs walking to water puddle in the morning light

Two Nedoceratops dinosaurs walking to water puddle in the morning light

Background imageCerapoda Collection: A herd of Albertaceratops from the Cretaceous Period

A herd of Albertaceratops from the Cretaceous Period

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Three Nedoceratops in the desert by daylight

Three Nedoceratops in the desert by daylight

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Albertaceratops dinosaur from the Upper Cretaceous Era

Albertaceratops dinosaur from the Upper Cretaceous Era
Albertaceratops, a member of ceratopsian dinosaur from the Upper Cretaceous Era

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Confrontation between two male Albertaceratops

Confrontation between two male Albertaceratops
A pair of male Albertaceratops confront each other in a territorial dispute

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Albertaceratops surveys the land

Albertaceratops surveys the land. Albertaceratops was a horned dinosaur from the Upper Cretaceous of Alberta, Canada

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Territorial confrontation between two male Triceratops

Territorial confrontation between two male Triceratops during the Cretaceous period of time

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Triceratops, a herbivorous dinosaur from the Cretaceous Period

Triceratops, a herbivorous dinosaur from the Cretaceous Period
Triceratops is a genus of herbivorous dinosaur that lived in North America during the Cretaceous Period

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Torosaurus, a herbivorous dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous

Torosaurus, a herbivorous dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous period. It had the largest skull of any known land animal

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Nedoceratops roaring while among onychiopsis trees

Nedoceratops roaring while among onychiopsis trees

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Tyrannosaurus Rex roaring at two Triceratops on rocky terrain

Tyrannosaurus Rex roaring at two Triceratops on rocky terrain

Background imageCerapoda Collection: An adult Albertaceratops compared to a modern adult White Rhinoceros

An adult Albertaceratops compared to a modern adult White Rhinoceros
An adult Albertaceratops from 77 million years ago is compared to a modern adult White Rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum). The Albertaceratops is 6 and a half feet tall at the shoulder (weight unknown)

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Nedoceratops dinosaur, front view

Nedoceratops dinosaur, front view. Nedoceratops is a herbivorous ceratopsian dinosaur that lived in the Cretaceous Period of Wyoming, North America

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Diabloceratops, a herbivorous dinosaur from the Cretaceous Period

Diabloceratops, a herbivorous dinosaur from the Cretaceous Period
Diabloceratops, a herbivorous dinosaur from that lived during the Cretaceous Period in what is now Utah, USA

Background imageCerapoda Collection: A Zuniceratops wanders a Cretaceous forest

A Zuniceratops wanders a Cretaceous forest
A 10 foot long, 250 pound Zuniceratops wanders a Cretaceous forest 90 million years ago in what is today New Mexico. Like the better known and larger Triceratops, Zuniceratops was a Ceratopsid

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Aquilops is a ceratopsiam from the Early Cretaceous period

Aquilops is a ceratopsiam from the Early Cretaceous period of Montana

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Einiosaurus dinosaur

Einiosaurus dinosaur
Einiosaurus was a herbivorous ceratopsian dinosaur that lived in the Cretaceous Age of Montana, North America

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Einiosaurus dinosaur, side view

Einiosaurus dinosaur, side view
Einiosaurus was a herbivorous ceratopsian dinosaur that lived in the Cretaceous Age of Montana, North America

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Diabloceratops dinosaur

Diabloceratops dinosaur
Diabloceratops was a herbivorous dinosaur that lived in the Cretaceous Period of Utah, North America

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Styracosaurus dinosaurs calling out to each other

Styracosaurus dinosaurs calling out to each other as a sand storm comes to an end

Background imageCerapoda Collection: A Pentaceratops dinosaur ambles among forest trees in the Cretaceous Era

A Pentaceratops dinosaur ambles among forest trees in the Cretaceous Era

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Bistahieversor attacking a pair of Pentaceratops

Bistahieversor attacking a pair of Pentaceratops
From the Kirtland Formation of New Mexico we have a protofeathered Tyrannosaur called Bistahieversor attacking a pair of Pentaceratops

Background imageCerapoda Collection: A colorful Triceratops wanders a Cretaceous forest

A colorful Triceratops wanders a Cretaceous forest
A ten ton Triceratops wanders a Cretaceous forest 68 million years ago in what is today the Western United States

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Diabloceratops was a ceratopsian dinosaur from the Cretaceous Period

Diabloceratops was a ceratopsian dinosaur from the Cretaceous Period
Diabloceratops was a ceratopsian dinosaur that lived approximately 79 million years ago during the latter part of the Cretaceous Period in what is now Utah, United States

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Petrified Tyrannosaurus rex and Triceratops dinosaurs

Petrified Tyrannosaurus rex and Triceratops dinosaurs
Petrified Tyrannosaurus rex and Triceratops from the Cretaceous Period

Background imageCerapoda Collection: A colorful Pentaceratops wanders a Cretaceous forest

A colorful Pentaceratops wanders a Cretaceous forest
A six ton, 27 foot long Pentaceratops wonders a Cretaceous forest 75 million years ago in what is today the southwestern United States

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Albertaceratops dinosaur head

Albertaceratops dinosaur head
Albertaceratops is a herbivorous dinosaur that lived in Upper North America during the Cretaceous Period

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Triceratops grazing on a magnolia tree

Triceratops grazing on a magnolia tree next to cycas

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Nedoceratops dinosaur grazing in grassy field

Nedoceratops dinosaur grazing in grassy field

Background imageCerapoda Collection: A colorful Torosaurus wanders a Cretaceous forest

A colorful Torosaurus wanders a Cretaceous forest 75 million years ago in what is today southeastern Wyoming. Like the better known Triceratops, Torosaurus was a ceratopsid

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Petrified Triceratops dinosaurs from the Cretaceous Period

Petrified Triceratops dinosaurs from the Cretaceous Period

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Living fossils in a desert landscape

Living fossils in a desert landscape

Background imageCerapoda Collection: An Albertaceratops wanders a Cretaceous forest

An Albertaceratops wanders a Cretaceous forest
A 20 foot long Albertaceratops wanders a Cretaceous forest 77 million years ago in what is today Alberta, Canada. Like the better known Triceratops, Albertaceratops was a Ceratopsid

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Montanoceratops dinosaur

Montanoceratops dinosaur, white background

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Einiosaurus dinosaur roaring in nature

Einiosaurus dinosaur roaring in nature

Background imageCerapoda Collection: A male Torosaurus drinks from a river

A male Torosaurus drinks from a river
A five ton, 25 foot long male Torosaurus drinks from a river bordered by ferns and Bald Cypress in what is today southeastern Wyoming

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Confrontation between two Triceratops

Confrontation between two Triceratops

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Two Einiosaurus dinosaurs dead in the desert because of lack of water

Two Einiosaurus dinosaurs dead in the desert because of lack of water

Background imageCerapoda Collection: Pentaceratops, a herbivorous dinosaur from the Cretaceous Period

Pentaceratops, a herbivorous dinosaur from the Cretaceous Period
Pentaceratops, a herbivorous dinosaur that lived in North America during the Cretaceous Period




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"Cerapoda: Unveiling the Majestic World of Dinosaurs at Crystal Palace Park" Step into a prehistoric wonderland as you explore the fascinating realm of Cerapoda. This captivating exhibition takes you on a journey through time, showcasing some of the most iconic dinosaurs that once roamed our planet. Marvel at the mighty Triceratops, with its formidable horns and frilled head, standing tall amidst lush greenery. Immerse yourself in The Wealden, an ancient landscape where Iguanodon and Hylaeosaurus thrived alongside their colossal counterparts. Gaze upon meticulously crafted restorations that bring these long-extinct creatures back to life. From Corythosaurus with its distinctive crest to the awe-inspiring Parasaurolophus skeleton, each exhibit offers a glimpse into Earth's distant past. Witness astonishing reconstructions of secondary period animals like Iguanodon and Megalosaurus engaging in lifelike interactions. Feel dwarfed by Triceratop dinosaur skeleton C016/5928 as it towers above you, reminding us of their immense size and power. Discover lesser-known species such as Heterodontosaurus and Protoceratops – pint-sized but no less intriguing members of this diverse family. Compare their sizes to other extinct animals showcased here, highlighting just how extraordinary these ancient beings were. Embark on an educational adventure for all ages as Cerapoda transports you back millions of years ago when dinosaurs ruled the Earth. Let your imagination run wild amidst these incredible fossils and learn about our planet's rich history through this captivating exhibition at Crystal Palace Park.