Natural History Museum
nhm.ac.uk › discover › dino-directory › timeline › late-jurassic › gallery.html
Dinosaurs from the Late Jurassic Period | Natural History Museum
(164 to 145 million years ago) 45 dinosaurs from the Late Jurassic · Agilisaurus · Allosaurus · Anchiornis · Apatosaurus · Archaeopteryx · Barosaurus · Brachiosaurus · Camarasaurus · Camptosaurus · Ceratosaurus · Chaoyangsaurus · Chinshakiangosaurus ·
second period of the Mesozoic Era
Factsheet
Etymology
Name formality Formal
Usage information
Etymology
Name formality Formal
Usage information
Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jurassic
Jurassic - Wikipedia
1 week ago - The first stem-group birds appeared during the Jurassic, evolving from a branch of theropod dinosaurs. Other major events include the appearance of the earliest crabs and modern frogs, salamanders and lizards. Mammaliaformes, one of the few cynodont lineages to survive the end of the Triassic, continued to diversify throughout the period, with the Jurassic seeing the emergence of the first crown group mammals.
Videos
20:28
Top 10 Dinosaurs of the Jurassic Period - YouTube
49:32
The Jurassic Period (That We Know Of) ft. TheDinoFax - YouTube
45:02
The Complete History of the Earth: Early Jurassic Period - YouTube
10:02
Every Dinosaur Period Explained in 10 Minutes - YouTube
22:45
100 Days In The Jurassic Period - YouTube
27:29
10 Dinosaurs I Didn't Know Existed - YouTube
Why is the Jurassic period the one most popularly associated with dinosaurs, when most of the most recognizable dinosaur species are from the Cretaceous?
Which species do you consider most popular? Because aside from T-rex, the dinosaurs that immediately come to my mind are jurassic. Diplodocus, other sauropods, stegosaurus, allosairus, ceratosaurus... it's been some time since I left my childhood dinosaur obsession so I might remember it wrong tho. More on reddit.com
Is there anything that can be said about the Jurassic period which marks it as distinct and more impressive than the Cretaceous?
The Jurassic is literally known as the Golden Age of the dinosaurs... I have no idea why my comment is downvoted. If I'm FACTUALLY wrong about something, then it would be nice if someone were to correct me instead of just saying that I am wrong. More on reddit.com
Prehistoric World Map of the Jurassic Period
Why is there a Postosuchus, Herrerasaurus and Triceratops in the Jurassic? More on reddit.com
What was the most common dinosaur in Jurassic era?
Well in the Morrison formation in the United States it seems Camarasaurus was a very commn animal More on reddit.com
Reddit
reddit.com › r/paleontology › why is the jurassic period the one most popularly associated with dinosaurs, when most of the most recognizable dinosaur species are from the cretaceous?
r/Paleontology on Reddit: Why is the Jurassic period the one most popularly associated with dinosaurs, when most of the most recognizable dinosaur species are from the Cretaceous?
April 23, 2024 -
I know the easy answer is "Jurassic Park," but that's just begging the question, since clearly Jurassic Park also got the idea from somewhere that Jurassic = dinosaurs, even though most of the species in the film/book are also Cretaceous species.
The most plausible answer I can come up with with no historical backing is that it's because Mary Anning and the other early paleontologists who founded the field in the early 1800s were digging primarily in Jurassic sites, so most of the finds that entered the public consciousness were Jurassic species, and that name just kind of stuck in people's minds as a synecdoche for the genera of animals being found. Is this the case, or is there more at play to the story that I'm not aware of?
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You’re overthinking it. It’s solely because of Jurassic Park. Michael Crichton picked “Jurassic” for the name because it sounds good. “Mesozoic Park” or “Cretaceous Park” don’t sound as good and are not as easy to read for average Joe.
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The previous comments are also forgetting the fact that dinosaurs become a huge part of the pop culture zeitgeist during the Bone Wars, when GIANT dinosaurs from the Jurassic were being no excavated and displayed.
U.S. National Park Service
nps.gov › subjects › fossils › jurassic-dinosaurs.htm
Jurassic Dinosaurs - Fossils and Paleontology (U.S. National Park Service)
May 30, 2023 - We have bones and/or footprints of most of the major lineages of dinosaurs dating back to the Early Jurassic: carnivorous theropods; the enormous sauropods with their long necks and long tails; armored dinosaurs, including plated stegosaurs and scute-bearing ankylosaurs; and ornithopods, bipedal beaked herbivores.
University of California Museum of Paleontology
ucmp.berkeley.edu › mesozoic › jurassic › jurassic.php
The Jurassic Period
Great plant-eating dinosaurs roaming the earth, feeding on lush ferns and palm-like cycads and bennettitaleans … smaller but vicious carnivores stalking the great herbivores … oceans full of fish, squid, and coiled ammonites, plus great ichthyosaurs and long-necked plesiosaurs … vertebrates taking to the air, like the pterosaurs and the first birds. This was the Jurassic Period, 199.6 to 145.5 million years ago* a 54-million-year chunk of the Mesozoic Era.
Natural History Museum
nhm.ac.uk › discover › the-jurassic-period.html
The Jurassic Period: How did dinosaurs go from basal to bulky? | Natural History Museum
The Jurassic is a geological period that began 201.4 million years ago and ended 145 million years ago. It’s part of the Mesozoic Era – the part of our planet’s prehistory known as the age of the dinosaurs.
National Geographic
nationalgeographic.com › home › science › what is the jurassic period and why did it end?
Jurassic period information and facts | National Geographic | National Geographic
August 18, 2025 - Thanks to this rich record, we know that the Jurassic was the age of dinosaurs roaming a tropical Earth filled with ferns, flowering plants, and conifers. It was also a time when sea monsters, sharks, and blood-red plankton filled inland seas borne of crumbling landmasses. Here’s what the Jurassic period was really like.
Study.com
study.com › science courses › dinosaur study guide
Dinosaurs of the Jurassic Period | Study.com
If you could go back in time to the Jurassic Period, one of the first things you'd definitely notice would be various sauropods, which were the largest terrestrial dinosaurs to have ever existed.
USGS
usgs.gov › faqs › did-all-dinosaurs-live-together-and-same-time
Did all the dinosaurs live together, and at the same time? | U.S. Geological Survey
Different dinosaur species lived during each of these three periods. For example, the Jurassic dinosaur Stegosaurus had already been extinct for approximately 80 million years before the appearance of the Cretaceous dinosaur Tyrannosaurus. In fact, the time separating Stegosaurus and Tyrannosaurus ...
Natural History Museum
natmus.humboldt.edu › exhibits › life-through-time › visual-timeline › jurassic-period
Jurassic Period | Natural History Museum
October 3, 2012 - Jurassic* ammonites and dinosaurs made a huge comeback after their near extinction at the end of the Triassic. Oysters, crabs, lobsters, and teleost (modern) fish appear. Plesiosaurs and marine crocodiles first appeared, joining icthyosaurs, sharks, bony fish, cephalopods and many other marine ...
Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › List_of_North_American_dinosaurs
List of North American dinosaurs - Wikipedia
November 9, 2025 - Fossils of Tawa-like dinosaurs have also been found in South America, which has implications for paleogeography. During the Early Jurassic, dinosaurs such as Dilophosaurus, Anchisaurus, Podokesaurus, and the early thyreophoran Scutellosaurus lived in North America.