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VEGETARIAN KILLER----THERIZINOSAURUS

Therizinosaurus meaning 'scythe lizard' is a genus of very large therizinosaurid that lived in Asia during the Late Cretaceous period in what is now the Nemegt Formation around 72.1 million years ago to 66 million years ago. It contains a single species, Therizinosaurus cheloniformis. The first remains of Therizinosaurus were found in 1948 by a Mongolian field expedition at the Gobi Desert and later described by Evgeny Maleev in 1954. The genus is only known from a few bones, including gigantic manual unguals (claw bones), from which it gets its name, and additional findings comprising fore and hindlimb elements that were discovered from the 1960s through the 1980s.

Therizinosaurus was a colossal therizinosaurid that could grow up to 9–10 m long and 4–5 m tall, and weigh possibly over 5 t. Like other therizinosaurids, it would have been a slow-moving, long-necked, high browser equipped with a rhamphotheca (horny beak) and a wide torso for food processing. Its forelimbs were particularly robust and had three fingers that bore unguals which, unlike other relatives, were very stiffened, elongated, and only had significant curvatures at the tips. Therizinosaurus had the longest known manual unguals of any land animal, reaching above 50 cm in length. Its hindlimbs ended in four functionally weight-bearing toes differing from other theropod groups in which the first toe was reduced to a dewclaw and also resembling the very distantly related sauropodomorphs.

The unusual arms and body anatomy (extrapolated after relatives) of Therizinosaurus have been cited as an example of convergent evolution with chalicotheriines and other primarily herbivorous mammals, suggesting similar feeding habits. The elongated hand claws of Therizinosaurus were more useful when pulling vegetation within reach rather than being used for active attack or defense because of their fragility, however, they may have had some role for intimidation. Its arms also were particularly resistant to stress, which suggests a robust use of these limbs. Therizinosaurus was a very tall animal, likely having a reduced competition over the foliage in its habitat and outmatching predators like Tarbosaurus.

Although Therizinosaurs were docile herbivores in behavior and appearance, they were still theropods, and like their distant relatives the Tyrannosaurus rex, they were capable of doing some serious damage, although not as powerfully as Tyrannosaurus rex or Spinosaurus.

 

Compared with Tyrannosaurus rex and Spinosaurus, Therizinosaurus is not very powerful, but it is close to their lethality; for herbivores, its damage is quite amazing, second only to the mammoth's stampede attack , as well as Brontosaurus and Titanosaurus. However, Therizinosaurus' attack speed is faster than Tyrannosaurus Rex and Spinosaurus.