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This dinosaur is often thought to have small wimpy arms, but they were actually quite strong.
Shown in movies to be vicious, crafty pack hunters, these dinosaurs were, in reality, covered in feathers and turkey-sized.
Known to the public as 'Pterodactyl', this flying reptile is not technically a dinosaur.
Although it was bigger than T. rex, it lived millions of years prior to it and the two would have never met.
This dinosaur is famous for having a second 'brain' in its tail, but it's actually just an energy reserve.
It is not actually the smallest dinosaur, but it's close.
Often called 'Brontosaurus', a once invalid species name. But 'Brontosaurus' is now considered a separate species.
Often depicted as a herding animal; nobody's actually certain if it was.
It's probably not an 'egg robber'; it was only protecting its own.
Not the gigantic sea monster it's famous as. It was really only about the size of an orca.
Despite its gigantic front arms, it did not have to wade through swamps to support its weight.
The venom-spitting version with scary frills is purely fictional.
Although it could fly, it probably spent most of its time scavenging on all fours and definitely did not migrate overseas.
This sea creature is not really a dinosaur. It is instead more closely related to lizards, while dinosaurs are closely related to birds.
Like there wasn't a single 'first' jazz singer, this wasn't precisely the 'first' dinosaur.
It did in fact have very large claws, but they were not necessarily used as deadly weapons.
This sea reptile's long neck was straight and rigid, and could not bend like a snake.
It's not a dinosaur, instead an ancestral mammal relative that predated dinosaurs by millions of years.
Despite its name, it has no taste for Mexican cuisine.
It was originally thought to be aquatic, using its tube-shaped head crest as a snorkel.
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