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Tag: Parental Behaviour

16 Dec 202527 Jan 2026 James Ronan Dinosaurs, Education, Fossil Discoveries, Fossils, Hadrosauridae, Hadrosaurs, Lambeosaurinae, Learning, Natural History, Newsletter, Palaeobiology, Palaeontology, Palaeontology Newsletter, Saurolophinae, Scientific Newsletter, The Palaeo Minute, Unlock Dino Insights

Exploring Hadrosaur Social Behaviour and Communication

Venture into the Lost World…One Minute at a Time

Your source for prehistoric knowledge!

A warm welcome to The Palaeo Minute!

Crests, Calls & Cretaceous Kinships: This issue explores hadrosaur life beyond the bones. Dive into how these Cretaceous giants communicated, raised their young, and thrived together in mixed herds across the prehistoric world. I hope you enjoy the fascinating palaeontology content and discoveries in this edition.

This edition explores:

  • Meet the Hadrosaur Family: The Saurolophinae (non-crested) vs. Lambeosaurinae (crested) hadrosaurs.
  • How Hadrosaurs Communicated: Their social calls, signals & nesting behaviours.
  • Herd Life Revealed: The fossil evidence proving hadrosaurs thrived in social groups.
  • Dinosaur Parenting: Why hadrosaurs were devoted caregivers to their young.
Continue reading “Exploring Hadrosaur Social Behaviour and Communication” →

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The Jurassic Coast Growing a science communication platform from a humble blog into a globally viewed website with more than 90,000 visitors is no small feat. It requires relentless writing, editing, formatting, and revising, along with the invisible work that shapes the reader experience: buttons, layouts, internal links, image placement, and overall design. Iguanodon bernisssartensis was a large iguanodontian dinosaur that lived throughout the Early Cretaceous 145-125 million years ago. Iguanodon was a quadruped, able to move on all fours and move bipedally. The dinosaur was capable of reaching sizes in excess of thirty feet and weighed up to five tonnes.

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