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TRICERATOPS( A U D I O S L I D E S H O W )
The Dinosaurs of the Redpath Museum
© McGill University 2009
This teaching resource was made possible with funding from the PromoScience programme of NSERC.
Background: Discovery and Reconstruction
The Triceratops skull was discovered in Eastend, Saskatchewan in 2004 by Dr. Hans Larsson of McGill University and his students (collected under permit from the Royal Saskatchewan Museum).
Four hundred skull fragments were pieced together and a cast was made.
Photos: 1) Hans Larsson, Redpath Museum. 2) Torsten Bernhardt, Redpath Museum
© McGill University 2009
Triceratops Anatomy: Horns and Frill
Horns: Triceratopsmeans “three-horned face”
Frill
Photo: Jacky Farrell, Redpath Museum
© McGill University 2009
Triceratops Anatomy: Beak, Teeth, and Jaws
Beak Teeth
Jaw muscles passed through holes in the skull to attach to the frill
Photo: Jacky Farrell, Redpath Museum
© McGill University 2009
Triceratops Anatomy: Blood Vessels
Grooves left by blood vessels
Photo: Jacky Farrell, Redpath Museum
© McGill University 2009
What Colour Was the Head of a Triceratops?
Triceratops would have had a hard, keratinous layer covering most of its head. Similar to the beaks of birds, this layer may have been one colour or multicoloured.
Photos: USFWS National Digital Library (http://www.fws.gov/digitalmedia). Public domain.
© McGill University 2009
http://www.fws.gov/digitalmedia�
Acknowledgements
Concept, design, and production: Jacky Farrell
Script and narration: Bruno Paul Stenson
Scientific consultation: Dr. Hans Larsson
© McGill University 2009
This teaching resource was made possible with funding from the PromoScience programme of NSERC.
The Dinosaurs of the �Redpath MuseumBackground: Discovery and ReconstructionTriceratops Anatomy: Horns and FrillTriceratops Anatomy: �Beak, Teeth, and JawsTriceratops Anatomy: �Blood VesselsWhat Colour Was the Head of a Triceratops?Acknowledgements
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