PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Kronosaurus
  • Kronosaurus
rdfs:comment
  • Kronosaurus is a creature that was originally meant to be featured in Turok: Evolution. It was cut for unknown reasons.
  • Kronosaurus lived in the Early Cretaceous Period (Aptian-Albian). The holotype specimen of the species K. queenslandicus was described by Longman in 1924, and is currently in the Queensland Museum.
  • Kronosaurus is a type of water-based enemy in Dino Stalker. They are one of the water creatures players will face, the other being Plesiosaurus. It replaces the Mosasaurus from Dino Crisis 2.
  • Kronosaurus was a pliosaur from the Cretaceous period. It was 12 meters in length and had 80 teeth in total.
  • Kronosaurus (« lézard-temps ») est un genre disparu de Pliosauroidea (pliosaures ou plésiosaures à cou court). Il était parmi les plus grands pliosaures connus et a été nommé d'après le père des dieux grecs, Kronos. Il vivait pendant le Crétacé inférieur il y a 120 millions d'années.
  • Kronosaurus was 35 ft long, and was breifly futureed in Sea Monsters.
  • Kronosaurus was a huge ancient marine reptile that lived in the Jurrasic period. It was a smaller relative of Liopleurodon, and it grew to almost 45 feet long. It fed on fish, sharks, and smaller plesiosaurs such as Woolungasaurus and possibly Cryptoclidus.
  • Kronosaurus (pronounced Kroe-noe-sore-uss) ("lizard of Kronos") is an extinct genus of short-necked pliosaur. It was among the largest pliosaurs, and is appropriately named after the leader of the Greek Titans, Kronos.
  • While touring Australia in 1932, a fossil-hunting expedition from Harvard University led by William E. Schevill was told of some interesting rocks on some property near Hughenden. The rocks were limestone nodules containing the most complete skeleton of Kronosaurus ever discovered. After dynamiting the nodules out of the ground (and into smaller pieces), Scheville had them shipped back to Harvard for examination and preparation. The skull—which matched the holotype jaw fragment of K. queenslandicus—was prepared right away, but time and budget constraints put off restoration of the nearly complete skeleton for 20 years. The restored and mounted skeleton was displayed at Harvard in 1959.
owl:sameAs
Era
  • Cretaceous
bg
  • Red
Length
  • 9
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:dino/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:dinocrisis/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:fossil/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:jurassic-park/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:jurassicpark/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:turok/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:walking-with/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:walkingwith/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Range
Game
  • Jurassic Park: Builder
  • Jurassic World: The Game
  • Jurassic Park III: Park Builder
Name
  • Kronosaurus
Lenght
  • 6.0
dbkwik:ancient-life/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Weight
  • 15
Image caption
  • Kronosaur card from Jurassic World: The Game
Height
  • Unknown
Distinctions
  • Four large flippers
Homeworld
Time
Diet
  • Carnivore
abstract
  • Kronosaurus is a creature that was originally meant to be featured in Turok: Evolution. It was cut for unknown reasons.
  • Kronosaurus lived in the Early Cretaceous Period (Aptian-Albian). The holotype specimen of the species K. queenslandicus was described by Longman in 1924, and is currently in the Queensland Museum.
  • Kronosaurus is a type of water-based enemy in Dino Stalker. They are one of the water creatures players will face, the other being Plesiosaurus. It replaces the Mosasaurus from Dino Crisis 2.
  • Kronosaurus was a pliosaur from the Cretaceous period. It was 12 meters in length and had 80 teeth in total.
  • Kronosaurus (« lézard-temps ») est un genre disparu de Pliosauroidea (pliosaures ou plésiosaures à cou court). Il était parmi les plus grands pliosaures connus et a été nommé d'après le père des dieux grecs, Kronos. Il vivait pendant le Crétacé inférieur il y a 120 millions d'années.
  • Kronosaurus was 35 ft long, and was breifly futureed in Sea Monsters.
  • Kronosaurus was a huge ancient marine reptile that lived in the Jurrasic period. It was a smaller relative of Liopleurodon, and it grew to almost 45 feet long. It fed on fish, sharks, and smaller plesiosaurs such as Woolungasaurus and possibly Cryptoclidus.
  • Kronosaurus (pronounced Kroe-noe-sore-uss) ("lizard of Kronos") is an extinct genus of short-necked pliosaur. It was among the largest pliosaurs, and is appropriately named after the leader of the Greek Titans, Kronos.
  • While touring Australia in 1932, a fossil-hunting expedition from Harvard University led by William E. Schevill was told of some interesting rocks on some property near Hughenden. The rocks were limestone nodules containing the most complete skeleton of Kronosaurus ever discovered. After dynamiting the nodules out of the ground (and into smaller pieces), Scheville had them shipped back to Harvard for examination and preparation. The skull—which matched the holotype jaw fragment of K. queenslandicus—was prepared right away, but time and budget constraints put off restoration of the nearly complete skeleton for 20 years. The restored and mounted skeleton was displayed at Harvard in 1959. In 1977, a Colombian peasant farmer from Moniquirá turned up an enormous stone while tilling his field, which he later recognized as a possible fossil. Excavation revealed a nearly complete Kronosaurus skeleton, one of the best preserved fossils to come from Colombia. Oliver Hampe formally described the specimen in 1992, assigning it to a second species, K. boyacensis. The people of Villa de Leyva built a museum, El Fósil, around the spot where the skeleton was excavated, and the K. boyacensis skeleton is currently on display there.