“So what did you call those things that were chasing you? Hairy-saurauses?”
“Herrerasaurus, from the Triassic era. Now that we’ve bred them we can easily classify them as early theropod.”
— Richard Kiley talking about Dilophosaurus on the tour.
Herrerasaurus (“[Victorino] Herrera’s lizard”) was one of the oldest and most primitive Theropods, or meat-eating dinosaurs, though in its day it was relatively hyper-advanced. Its body displayed many of the same features of the later theropods. It walked on its hind legs, which sported feet with 5 digits each with the middle 3 being able to bear weight, and its arms ended in a long 5-digit hand with the first 3 ending in powerful claws used for grasping prey. Its teeth, like those of most theropods – were shaped like blades and had knife-like serrations running up the front and down the back. Its lower jaw had a special hinge about halfway along its length. This joint would have helped Herrerasaurus to better hold on to struggling victims. Many later theropods also had this hinge. Some scientists consider the Herrerasaurus to be more carnivorous primitive member of the Prosauropoda family.
Although Herrerasaurus shared the basic body design of future rulers of the Earth (like Allosaurus, Giganotosaurus, and Tyrannosaurus), it lived during the Triassic period, a time when the dinosaurs were not the most powerful animals on Earth. Herrerasaurus would have had to run away from the much larger Saurosuchus, a giant land-dwelling crocodile relative, and the even larger Fasolasuchus tenax, which was the largest meat-eater in Argentina during the beginning of the Mesozoic era.
JURASSIC WORLD BATTLE DAMAGE Herrerasaurus
DNA Scan Code
Name Meaning
Diet
Height
Lenght
Weight
Vocalisation
Gas lizard
Carnivorous 🥩
1.3 meters (4 feet)
3.5 meters (12 feet)
150 kilograms (330 lbs)