How is the parasaurolophus used its horn for sound resonating idea seen nowadays?
100% the leading hypothesis. we've even modeled what the sound would be like

#dc comics#dc#dc fanart#batman#bruce wayne#tim drake#batfam#dick grayson#batfamily



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How is the parasaurolophus used its horn for sound resonating idea seen nowadays?
100% the leading hypothesis. we've even modeled what the sound would be like

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Olorotitan headshot
Last paleoart piece before artfight
Another dinosaur in the Spooky Month artstyle! Garcia strikes me as the kind of guy to like Parasaurolophus.
Day 25- Velafrons
Prompts
Nothing tickles me more when I read old dinosaur books than wimpy, gangly hadrosaurs baring their necks for a tyrannosaur's waiting jaws, seemingly without a fight. I guess it's easy to mistake them for easy prey, being that they generally lack obvious weapons of self-defense, like the flashy horns, armor, or spikes of some of their fellow ornithischians. The fact that size in and of itself can be a means of defense seems to have fallen by the wayside.

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Abstract
The lambeosaurine Tsintaosaurus spinorhinus has traditionally been reconstructed with an elevated, hollow, spike-like crest composed entirely of the nasal bones, although this has been disputed. Here, we provide a new reconstruction of the skull of this species based on reexamination and reinterpretation of the morphology and articular relationships of the type and Paratype skulls and a fragmentary crest. We confirm the presence of a supracranial crest composed of the elevated nasal bones, but also including the premaxillae. We hypothesize that the crest is a tall, lobate, hollow structure that projects dorsally and slightly caudally a distance greater than the height of the skull along the quadrate. In our reconstruction, the nasal passage passes through the crest, but enters the skull rostral to the tubular process of the nasals, not through it. Tsintaosaurus spinorhinus is rediagnosed on the basis of a suite of cranial autapomorphies including a circumnarial fossa subdivided into three accessory fossae, prefrontal with ascending rostral process and lateral flange, nasals fused sagittally to form elongate tubular process that rises dorsally from skull roof, each nasal being expanded rostrocaudally into a rhomboid distal process, and medial processes of premaxillae at the summit of the cranial crest inserted between rhomboid processes of nasals. Tsintaosaurus spinorhinus lacks characters that are present in more derived lambeosaurines (parasaurolophins and lambeosaurins), such as rotation of the caudal margin of the crest to an acute angle with the skull roof, lateral processes of the nasals that enclose part of the intracranial cavity and participate in the formation of the walls of the common median chamber, and a smooth narial fossa lacking ridges and accessory fossae. We hypothesize that ancestrally the rostrum of lambeosaurines may have been more similar to that in Saurolophinae, and became subsequently reduced in complexity during evolution of the group.