rdfs:comment
| - Dryosaurus was a small and cute herbivore which was as fast like a horse and often formed flocks with its own species or others and it didn't posse any real combatant skills. And it has good night vision with an overall stamina of a high metabolic rate.
- Dryosaurus had a horny beak and cheek teeth and, like other ornithopods, was a herbivore. Some scientists suggest that it stored food in its cheeks. It was probably a herd animal, which raised and protected its young after hatching. A quick and agile runner with strong legs, Dryosaurus used its tail as a counter-balance. It probably relied on its speed as a main defense against carnivorous dinosaurs. Its intelligence, as measured by its EQ, (Encephalization Quotient) (brain-to-body ratio), was midway when compared with other dinosaurs.
- Dryosaurus is a genus of ornithopod dinosaur (an iguanodont to be specific), which lived during the late Jurassic period (160-140 MYA) in what is now North America and Africa.
- Dryosaurus was a medium sized Ornithopod that lived in the late jurassic America around 155 to 145 mya. Dryosaurus was likly preyed on by the large theropod: Ceratosaurus
- Dryosaurus is a human-sized herbivorous ornithopod, that is playable at The Isle.
- Real Dryosaurus were small plant-eating dinosaurs that lived in the United States during the Late Jurassic period. They were extremely fast, relying on speed to defend themselves from predators. They were 3, 3.5 or 4m long. Dryosaurus was an ancestor of the bulkier Iguanodon. It was first discovered and named by the famous American palentologist Othniel Charles Marsh. Its name means "oak tooth", as the teeth in its cheeks vaguely resemble an oak leaf.
- Dryosaurus had a long neck, long, slender legs and a long, stiff tail. Its arms, however, with five fingers on each hand, were short. Known specimens were about 8 to 14 feet (2.4 to 4.3 m) long and weighed 170 to 200 pounds (77 to 91 kg). However, the adult size is unknown, as no known adult specimens of the genus have been found.[4] Dryosaurus had a horny beak and cheek teeth and, like other ornithopods, was a herbivore. Some scientists suggest that it had cheek-like structures to prevent the loss of food while the animal processed it in the mouth.
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