Diabloceratops is a medium sized dinosaur that causes bleed to its enemies should be noted that it is a terrestrial and aggressive type creature it has limited night vision and overall stamina is of a low metabolic rate.
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rdf:type
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rdfs:label
| - Diabloceratops
- Diabloceratops
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rdfs:comment
| - Diabloceratops is a medium sized dinosaur that causes bleed to its enemies should be noted that it is a terrestrial and aggressive type creature it has limited night vision and overall stamina is of a low metabolic rate.
- Diabloceratops is a small ceratopsian from the Campanian age of the Cretaceous period, from 79 million years ago.
- The genus name combines the Spanish word Diablo, meaning "devil", a reference to the horns on the neck shield, with the Latinised Greek word ceratops, meaning "horned face", a usual element in ceratopsian names. The specific name honours Jeffrey Eaton, a paleontologist at Weber State University and long time friend of the lead author Jim Kirkland. Eaton had a big role in establishing the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument where the specimen was found. The type species, Diabloceratops eatoni, was named and described in 2010 by James Ian Kirkland and Donald DeBlieux.
- Diabloceratops was built like a typical ceratopsian in that it had a large neck frill made of bone. It had a small horn on the nose, perhaps a second horn in front of that, and a pair of relatively small horns above the eyes. The skull is deeper and shorter than that of any other centrosaurines.[4] Upon the frill it also had a pair of very long spikes as in Einiosaurus and Styracosaurus. It being one of the earliest centrosaurine ceratopsids, Kirkland noted a character Diabloceratops shared with the more "primitive" protoceratopsid forms. Both possess an accessory opening in the skull that would become much reduced or disappear in later, more advanced ceratopsids. Kirkland saw this as an indication that the earlier species were not together included in some single natural group but instead
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sameAs
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Length
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hunger
| - 40(xsd:integer)
- 117(xsd:integer)
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dcterms:subject
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Stamina
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dbkwik:fossil/prop...iPageUsesTemplate
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Stance
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Age
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Name
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bleed
| - 0(xsd:integer)
- 2(xsd:integer)
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dbkwik:isle/proper...iPageUsesTemplate
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name meaning
| - "Eaton's Devil horned face"
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Weight
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Height
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damge
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thirst
| - 40(xsd:integer)
- 50(xsd:integer)
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dbkwik:the-isle-di...iPageUsesTemplate
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Image
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Place
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abstract
| - Diabloceratops is a medium sized dinosaur that causes bleed to its enemies should be noted that it is a terrestrial and aggressive type creature it has limited night vision and overall stamina is of a low metabolic rate.
- Diabloceratops is a small ceratopsian from the Campanian age of the Cretaceous period, from 79 million years ago.
- The genus name combines the Spanish word Diablo, meaning "devil", a reference to the horns on the neck shield, with the Latinised Greek word ceratops, meaning "horned face", a usual element in ceratopsian names. The specific name honours Jeffrey Eaton, a paleontologist at Weber State University and long time friend of the lead author Jim Kirkland. Eaton had a big role in establishing the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument where the specimen was found. The type species, Diabloceratops eatoni, was named and described in 2010 by James Ian Kirkland and Donald DeBlieux.
- Diabloceratops was built like a typical ceratopsian in that it had a large neck frill made of bone. It had a small horn on the nose, perhaps a second horn in front of that, and a pair of relatively small horns above the eyes. The skull is deeper and shorter than that of any other centrosaurines.[4] Upon the frill it also had a pair of very long spikes as in Einiosaurus and Styracosaurus. It being one of the earliest centrosaurine ceratopsids, Kirkland noted a character Diabloceratops shared with the more "primitive" protoceratopsid forms. Both possess an accessory opening in the skull that would become much reduced or disappear in later, more advanced ceratopsids. Kirkland saw this as an indication that the earlier species were not together included in some single natural group but instead presented a gradual sequence of ever more derived forms, increasingly closer related to the Ceratopsidae.
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