@CanadianMint The Edmontonia Longiceps, considered an armoured dinosaur because small, oval ridged bony plates on its back and head and many sharp spikes along its sides. The large spikes were probably used between males in contests of strength to defend territory or gain mates. @CanadianMint
@CanadianMint The Pachyrhinosaurus Canadensis lived in your backyard, in Alberta, over 72.2 million years ago! The largest Pachyrhinosaurus species were 8 metres (26 ft) long and it weighed about four tons (about the same as a hungry, hungry hippo). @CanadianMint
@CanadianMint Albertorsaurus Sarcophagus is the dinosaur that put Canada on the palaeontology map in 1884. The meat-eating Albertosaurus sarcophagus is almost identical to its cousin Tyrannosaurus rex, but just not as large.
#CodingInParadiseRaffle@JetBrains@WeAreDevs The productivity features I would never code without are quick Deployment to dev-env, Version Control to test new concepts, and finally the Spelunker Chequer, because I don't always spell my words corrigenda.
https://t.co/KdI1fTWGCc