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RINCON COLORADO, Mexico (Reuters) - Scientists have discovered a new species of plant-eating dinosaur in Mexico whose large neck frill and three giant horns helped it attract mates and fight predators on a jungly beach 72 million years ago.
Mexico's Coahuila desert -- now rocky and cactus-filled -- was once covered by ocean where dinosaurs of all kinds thrived along the coast and hid from a giant relative of the fierce predator Tyrannosaurus rex.
Paleontologists say they have found evidence of a new species here related to the Triceratops, known to have the largest head of any ****** ever to have walked the earth.
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Mexico's Coahuila desert -- now rocky and cactus-filled -- was once covered by ocean where dinosaurs of all kinds thrived along the coast and hid from a giant relative of the fierce predator Tyrannosaurus rex.
Paleontologists say they have found evidence of a new species here related to the Triceratops, known to have the largest head of any ****** ever to have walked the earth.
Premium Link Upgrade