Allotitan
MemberCompsognathusAug-06-2014 11:22 AMWell I have been thinking and India is a large place that must have had lots of prehistoric life, specifically dinosaurs. When I searched up a list of dinosaurs in India, it showed most of the carnivorious ones to be abelisauridae. Why is it abelisauride mostly? Aren't they more of a secondary predator? And could it mean that other giant superpredators could be found in India such as tyrannosaur, spinosaur, etc.
This is the list:
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Indian_and_Madagascan_dinosaurs
Rajasaurus
Sorry... I had too... Love that pic.
When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Tell life I don't want you're damn lemons, and then squeeze them into life's eyes!
JRR
MemberCompsognathusAug-06-2014 11:28 AMNot necesarily, somrtimes beeng a large predators isn't very convinient
Top Hat Gyaos
MemberCompsognathusAug-06-2014 11:37 AMAbelisaurs ruled the southern hemisphere. Tyrannosaurs dominated the northern hemisphere. Spinosaurids were spread out, along with Allosaurids, and raptors.
Be yourself, for everyone else is taken.
Hiphopananomus
MemberCompsognathusAug-06-2014 11:46 AMI doubt a spinosaur would be an apex predator but, maybe there's a tyrannosaur or Carcharadontosaur waiting to be discovered.
"Somewhere on this island is the greatest predator that ever lived. Second greatest predator must take him down."Roland Tembo"
"Jurassic park: The Lost World"
Great Leonopteryx
MemberCompsognathusAug-06-2014 10:54 PManything is possible so idk
but I've seen other version of that cool looking picture