PLOS Thesaurus

Last uploaded: September 21, 2017
Preferred Name

Dinosaurs
Synonyms
ID

http://localhost/plosthes.2017-1#7317

alpha

Dinosaurs

broader

http://localhost/plosthes.2017-1#11666

homepage

http://journals.plos.org/plosone/browse/dinosaurs

narrower

http://localhost/plosthes.2017-1#11632

http://localhost/plosthes.2017-1#11633

prefLabel

Dinosaurs

Previous_Classification

10.280.10.50.20.20^Dinosaurs|10.290.50.50.20.10.20.20^Dinosaurs|10.290.170.20.20^Dinosaurs|30.130.50.50.20.10.20.20^Dinosaurs|30.130.170.20.20^Dinosaurs

scopeNote

Dinosaurs, one of the most successful groups of animals (in terms of longevity) that have ever lived, evolved into many diverse sizes and shapes, with many equally diverse modes of living. The term "Dinosauria" was invented by Sir Richard Owen in 1842 to describe these "fearfully great reptiles," specifically Megalosaurus, Iguanodon, and Hylaeosaurus, the only three dinosaurs known at the time. The creatures that we normally think of as dinosaurs lived during the Mesozoic Era, from late in the Triassic period (about 225 million years ago) until the end of the Cretaceous (about 65 million years ago). But we now know that they actually live on today as the birds. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/diapsids/dinosaur.html RD

status

Accepted

Synonym

http://localhost/plosthes.2017-1#T0

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