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  1. www.dinosaurs-on-stamps.info › d-listDinosaur Genera

    23 de out. de 1995 · DINOSAUR GENERA since: 28-October-1995 / last updated: 30-May-2024 Thank you to DinoGeorge Olshevsky (1946-2021) for the original listing on 23-October-1995 and also to all the other contributors from the Dinosaur Mailing Group. also: d-genera.pdf

  2. This is the FIRST prehistoric animal depicted on a postage stamp. It is not a dinosaur, not identified and you have to know what the Museum looks like to know it is there. Smilodons became extinct 10,000 years ago.

  3. Dinosaurs first appeared on postage stamps in 1958, with a picture of Lufengosaurus (People's Republic of China; Fig. 43.8). Many countries have put dinosaurs on their stamps even though the dinosaurs depicted never lived there. Some countries have blatantly copied the works of such

  4. This list of dinosaurs is a comprehensive listing of all genera that have ever been considered to be non-avian dinosaurs, but also includes some dinosaurs of disputed status (avian? or non-avian?, where "avian" refers to the clade Avialae), as well as purely vernacular terms.

  5. 11 de mar. de 2024 · Released on March 12, the Age of the Dinosaurs special issue from Royal Mail illustrates a selection of these extinct reptiles in their habitats. Eight stamps from counter sheets come in vertically se tenant pairs, each featuring dinosaurs from the same period.

  6. 29 de ago. de 2019 · The “Nations T. rex,” the young adult featured on two of the new stamps, was discovered in 1988 on federal land in Montana. Painstaking excavation revealed what would become one of the most studied and important tyrannosaur specimens ever found, including the first T. rex arms ever recovered.

  7. 1 de mai. de 1997 · Originally titled “Masters of the Mesozoic,” The World of Dinosaurs began as one block of four stamps, but the project quickly expanded to show two scenes from prehistoric North America: Colorado during the Jurassic period, approximately 150 million years ago; and Montana during the Cretaceous period, around 75 million years ago.