Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale
Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale

Brachyceratops Fossil Dinosaur skull for sale

Regular price
$14,995.00
Sale price
$14,995.00
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Brachyceratops real dinosaur fossil skull for sale

We offer here an extremely rare real dinosaurs skull for sale.

For more information or photos please call (314) 556-0650 or email us.

Brachyceratops ("small horned face") is an extinct genus of small herbivorous ceratopsian dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous , discovered in Alberta ( Canada ) and Montana ( United States ).

This genus is represented by a single species , Brachyceratops montanensis , described by Charles Whitney Gilmore in 1914 [ 1 ] , which was discovered in the Two Medicine Formation of Montana and dates from the Campanian.

Very small compared to its relatives such as Centrosaurus or Triceratops , it was only 70 centimeters high and 1.80 meters long.

Previously, only one specimen , presumably a juvenile, was known, and just as with Monoclonius , paleontologists seem increasingly inclined to want to classify brachyceratops as actually being a representative of another known genus of centrosaurine ceratopsian . In 2007, Michael J. Ryan proposed that it is the juvenile form of Styracosaurus ovatus [ 2 ] , which has since been renamed Rubeosaurus ovatus .