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1001 Awesome Animal Facts
1001 Awesome Animal Facts
1001 Awesome Animal Facts
Ebook274 pages57 minutes

1001 Awesome Animal Facts

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Whether you're curious about tiny bugs or terrifying beasts, this book is jam-packed with incredible, weird and wonderful facts about animals! Our mischievous narrator and his cartoon friends will reveal amazing facts about all kinds of animals, including prehistoric predators, creepy crawlies, feathered friends and everyday pets. There's even a whole section on the grossest facts, which may turn the stomachs of even the most dedicated animal lover!
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 31, 2020
ISBN9781398800861
1001 Awesome Animal Facts
Author

Marc Powell

Marc Powell's love of comics and animation grew initially out of his work as a games tester and developed when he launched and edited the world's first Playstation 3 magazine.

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    1001 Awesome Animal Facts - Marc Powell

    Prehistoric Predator

    Facts

    The word dinosaur means ‘terrible lizard’.

    In 1676, a huge femur (thigh bone) was found in England by Reverend Robert Plot. It was thought at the time that the bone belonged to a giant!

    Spinosaurus was the largest meat-eating dinosaur. Even though it looked big and scary, its favourite food was fish!

    In 1780, the remains of Mosasaurus were seized by the French army and were taken from the Netherlands all the way to Paris!

    Cells discovered in a T. rex bone have DNA that so closely resembles that of a bird, that some scientists believe T. rex would have tasted like chicken!

    Around 50,000 years ago, ancient Australia was home to Procoptodon, the world’s largest kangaroo. It was twice the size of today’s kangaroos.

    Some dinosaurs, such as Parasaurolophus, used their large noses to control their body temperature by adjusting the amount of air they breathed in.

    Four in every five dinosaur discoveries are made by amateurs rather than by scientists.

    It was possible to tell the age of a Mastodon (ancient relative of modern elephants) by cutting into the fat around its tusks. The rings in the fat could be counted to determine its age, just like a tree!

    Approximately 440 different kinds of dinosaurs are currently known to have existed.

    Unlike in the movies, Velociraptor did not kill its prey with its razor-sharp claw. It used its claws to hang on to its prey while attacking it with its teeth, a bit like lions do today.

    Some Pteranodons (flying reptiles, like dinosaurs) used their pointy heads as an air-brake for landing – they would turn sideways to catch the wind and slow themselves down.

    Horses evolved around 50 million years ago, soon after dinosaurs became extinct.

    When dinosaurs first appeared during the Triassic period, (248–206 million years ago) the earth had just one huge continent called Pangea.

    Over 100 million years ago, crocodiles were twice the size they are now.

    The gigantic dinosaur Sauroposeidon could stretch its neck out 17 metres/55 feet. That’s the same height as four double-decker buses stacked on top of each other!

    Over 390 million years ago, prehistoric swamps were home to sea scorpions larger than humans. Discovered in Germany, one fossilized beast was a whopping 2.5 metres/8 feet long!

    Scientists use dentists’ drills to clean dinosaur bones.

    Quetzalcoatlus was the biggest flying creature ever. It had enormous wings and was the size of a modern two-seater aeroplane!

    Fossilized cockroaches have been found to be 300 million years old. This means they existed 100 million years before the dinosaurs!

    On the tiny Arctic island of Spitsbergen, just off the coast of Norway, researchers discovered a fossil graveyard holding a total of 28 plesiosaurs and ichthyosaurs. Why they all died in that particular area is a mystery.

    Because the pigment (colour) is not preserved in fossils, nobody knows what colour the dinosaurs were. Many palaeontologists think they were earthy colours like grey, green or brown.

    T. rex ate the equivalent in meat of 290 adult humans every year.

    The first dinosaur, Eoraptor, appeared around 225 or 230 million years ago and was about the size of a dog.

    T. rex could run no faster than 32 kilometres/20 miles per hour. If it fell over while running, it probably would have died as its arms were too short to break its fall.

    Scientists believe that dinosaurs talked to each other. From examining their head shapes, it’s thought that T. rex probably had a deep raspy call, a Hadrosaur sounded like a honking goose and Apatosaurus sounded like a herd of snorting horses!

    A massive sloth called Megatherium roamed the earth as recently as 8,000 years ago. If the huge elephant-sized beast hadn’t been wiped out by human hunting they’d still be alive today!

    The woolly mammoth, which roamed the earth around 10,000 years ago, had tusks that stretched a massive 4.8 metres/16 feet. That’s nearly three times the length of an elephant’s tusks.

    There is a Harry Potter dinosaur! Children viewing a newly discovered Pachycephalosaurus skull in Indianapolis, USA, suggested naming the dinosaur Dracorex hogwartsia – Dracorex meaning ‘dragon king’ and ‘hogwartsia’ after the famous young wizard’s school.

    Palaeontologists know what the dinosaurs ate because they study fossilized coprolite – that’s right, giant dino poop!

    Dakosaurus was a water creature with a head like a meat-eating dinosaur but the flippers and tail of a fish. What a combination!

    Mosquitoes have been buzzing around the planet, sucking blood for around 200 million years. Even dinosaurs could have been bitten by them!

    The largest coprolite discovered measures 50 centimetres/19.5 inches wide and was produced by a T. rex in Saskatchewan, Canada, more than 65 million years ago.

    The largest brain of any dinosaur in relation to its body size belonged to the Troodon. It’s thought that it was cleverer than any reptile living today.

    Ever wonder what happened to Brontosaurus? It was ‘discovered’ in 1879 but only later did scientists realize that it had already been discovered in 1877 and was already called Apatosaurus!

    Earth was home to nearly twice as many plant-eating dinosaurs as meat-eating dinosaurs.

    The place with the best chance of finding a new dinosaur species is Dinosaur Provincial Park in Alberta, Canada. It has been the discovery site of 35 separate species – more than anywhere else in the world.

    Some dinosaurs had nostrils on top of their heads, so people used to think they lived underwater.

    Fossil evidence suggests the huge shark Megalodon, which was around between 18 million and 2 million years ago, hunted large whales by biting off their tails and flippers.

    The first dinosaur to appear in a novel was a Megalosaurus, mentioned in the first paragraph of Charles Dickens’ Bleak House in 1852.

    Brachiosaurus had high blood pressure – it was four times that of a human’s, in fact. Why? Because it needed to pump blood all the way up its massive neck!

    Female T. rexes are believed to have been bigger than males.

    The first piece of dinosaur to make it into space was a fragment of Maisaura bone and eggshell which flew on a Spacelab II mission in 1985.

    Leonardo, a 77-million-year-old Brachylophosaurus fossil discovered in Montana, USA, is unique for being the only fossil ever discovered completely covered in skin. The skin preserved its internal organs too, giving scientists an amazing insight into how dinosaurs’ bodies worked.

    Woolly mammoths had a flap of hairy skin that protected their bottoms from the cold!

    Diplodocus may have been one of the biggest animals to ever exist, but its brain was only the size of a human fist!

    Fish have been on Earth for more than 450 million years and were long-term residents of the planet long before dinosaurs arrived.

    The most complete T. rex skeleton ever found has a name: Sue! It was named after Sue Hendrickson, the amateur palaeontologist who discovered the remains in 1990.

    In 1853 a life-sized model of an Iguanodon was constructed for the opening of the Crystal

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