This original illustration by Richard H. Fay features a Tyrannosaurus rex, one of the largest known carnivorous dinosaurs. Forty feet long and sporting powerfully-built jaws lined with long serrated teeth, this Cretaceous Period beast was imposing-looking enough to earn the title “Tyrant Lizard King”.
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theropod, tyrannosaur, t rex, tyrannosaurus, tyrannosaurus rex
This original illustration by Richard H. Fay features a three-horned plant-eating Triceratops, one of the last non-avian dinosaurs to have evolved prior to the mass extinction event at the end of the Cretaceous Period.
This original illustration by Richard H. Fay features an Allosaurus, a meat-eating theropod dinosaur that prowled western North America during the Late Jurassic.
This original illustration by Richard H. Fay features a Brachiosaurus, a large plant-eating sauropod of the late Jurassic that towered over most other dinosaurs.
This illustration by Richard H. Fay features the Late Cretaceous armoured dinosaur known as Ankylosaurus. Along with armour plates, this 6-8 metre long herbivore sported a knobbed tail that formed a formidable-looking club.
This original illustration by Richard H. Fay features the giant plant-eating sauropod dinosaur of the Late Jurassic known as Apatosaurus. Many people know this dinosaur by the moniker Brontosaurus, a name meaning “thunder lizard”.
This original illustration by Richard H. Fay features a Stegosaurus, a plated dinosaur that lived in North America during the Late Jurassic. The plates on its back, whose function remains a matter of debate, gave this dinosaur its name. Stegosaurus means “roof lizard”, a reference to those distinctive plates.
This original illustration by Richard H. Fay depicts the fleet-footed feathered Late Cretaceous theropod dinosaur known as Ornithomimus (“bird mimic”), one of the “ostrich mimics”.