![]() At the end, though, two of them feast on the beached Liopleurodon, and it is likely many more Eustreptospondylus will arrive soon, to take advantage of all this food.Įustreptospondylus was not featured in any of the Walking With Dinosaurs specials. Later on, one of them is seen trying to catch a Rhamphorynchus, to eat. In the beginning scene, one of them was snapped up by a Liopleurodon. A partial skeleton of the Eustreptspondylus is on display at the Oxford University Museum of Natural History in Great Britain, along with a Walking With Dinosaurs type Model of its head and neck made by the same animatronics organisation that made the Walking With Dinosaurs props (Crawly Creatures)Įustreptospondylus featured in Cruel Sea, the third Walking with Dinosaurs episode. It was depicted as an opportunistic predator, scavenging and fighting over carrion with members of its own kind.Įven so, it is said to have been the largest of the 'Islanders Dinosaurs' and definitely would be a deadly carnivore in its own right at 5-7 metres long. It lived during the late jurassic 165 million. Eustreptospondylus was an amazing theropod carnivore dinosaur. It is a fairly well known English Dinosaur, part of the Oxford Clay Deposits and one of the most enigmatic Theropods of this region of Europe during the Mid-Late Jurassic Period, and is shown in Walking With Dinosaurs to have endured to 149 Million Years Ago, which is probable.Įustreptospondylus tries to eat the last flesh of a turtleĮustreptospondylus swimming between islands for carrion, 149 MYA. walking with dinosaurs Eustreptospondylus. When it was first discovered it was assigned to the 'wastebasket' genus of Megalosaurus, but it has in the last few decades been reassigned as its own species, Eustreptospondylus. Europe (NW Europe island chains of the late Jurassic)Įustreptospondylus was a medium-large sized Late Jurassic nomadic islander predator.
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