Hadrosaurus
ZooTek Phoenix (http://zootekphoenix.com/forums//index.php?app=downloads&showfile=2070)
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Author: Moondawg
Keywords: extinct animals, dinosaurs
Date Released: Nov 30 2008
Current HadrosaurusMD_2008.ztd dated 27 November 2008
File Size: 3.03mb
Compatibility: DD and CC
Description: Hadrosaurus (hadros + sauros = sturdy lizard) is a dubious genus of hadrosaurid dinosaur.
In 1858, a skeleton of a dinosaur from this genus was the first full dinosaur skeleton found in North America and, in 1868, it became the first ever mounted dinosaur skeleton. Hadrosaurus foulkii is the only species in this genus and has been the official state dinosaur of New Jersey since 1991.
Hadrosaurus lived near what is now the coast of New Jersey, U.S.A., in the late Cretaceous Period - around 80 million years ago. It was likely bipedal for the purposes of running, but could use its forelegs to support itself while grazing - like all hadrosaurids, Hadrosaurus was herbivorous. Its teeth suggest it ate twigs and leaves
Hadrosaurus lived near what is now the coast of New Jersey, U.S.A., in the late Cretaceous Period - around 80 million years ago. It was likely bipedal for the purposes of running, but could use its forelegs to support itself while grazing - like all hadrosaurids, Hadrosaurus was herbivorous. Its teeth suggest it ate twigs and leaves.
In 1838, William Estaugh Hopkins was digging in a marl pit (on a small tributary of the Cooper River in Haddonfield, New Jersey) when he uncovered large bones, putting them on display at his home, also in Haddonfield. In 1858 these bones sparked the interest of a visitor, William Parker Foulke. The skeleton was dug out from the marl pit in 1858 by Foulke. In the same year, the species was named by paleontologist Joseph Leidy from an almost complete set of limbs, along with a pelvis, several part of the feet, twenty-eight vertebrae (including eighteen from the tail), eight teeth and two small parts of the jaw. Leidy recognized that these bones were from a dinosaur by their similarity to those of Iguanodon, discovered in England some decades before, but the skeleton of Hadrosaurus was far more complete. Leidy's monograph Cretaceous Reptiles of the United States, describing Hadrosaurus more completely and with illustrations, was written in 1860 but the American Civil War delayed its publication until 1865. Leidy reconstructed Hadrosaurus as a biped, in contrast to the view at the time that such dinosaurs were quadrupedal. The entire skeleton was completely assembled in 1868 by a team including English sculptor and naturalist Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins and was put on display at Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences, where it remains available for public viewing.
(http://www.ztcdd.org/DD/ZTScreensTek/Animals/Hadrosaurus.jpg)
Additional info:
HadrosaurusMD_2008.ztd uca: F434CE28 dated 27 November 2008
Results From Configuration Checking:
f434ce28.uca date: Thu Nov 27 21:48:56 2008
No Errors or Warnings to show.
Animal Type: F434CE28
Hadrosaurus
Hadrosaurus lived near what is now the coast of New Jersey, U.S.A., in the
late Cretaceous Period - around 80 million years ago. It was likely bipedal
for the purposes of running, but could use its forelegs to support itself
while grazing - like all hadrosaurids, Hadrosaurus was herbivorous. Its teeth
suggest it ate twigs and leaves
(plus 2 other paragraphs)
Animal Characteristics:
Habitat: Coniferous Forest; Location: North America; Era: Cretaceous
Minimum happiness needed for chance of breeding: 95.
Animal can jump.
Animal can climb cliffs.
Cannot be used in original Zoo Tycoon: cKeeperFoodType (8) is not 0 to 5.
Exhibit Preferences:
Foliage:
Lodgepole Pine Tree, Fir Tree, Pine Tree, Yew Tree, Spruce Tree
Yellow Cedar Tree, Western Red Cedar Tree, Chinese Fir Tree, Broadleaf Bush
Pine Bush, Club Moss Shrub (DD), Walchian Conifer Tree (DD)
Dawn Redwood Tree (DD), Lepidodendron Tree (DD), Monkey Puzzle Tree (DD)
Norfolk Island Pine Tree (DD)
Rocks:
Large Rock, Large Rock - 1, Large Rock - 2, Large Rock - 3, Large Rock - 4
Small Rock - Medium, Small Rock - Small, Small Rock - 7, Small Rock - 8
Small Rock - 9, Coniferous Forest Rock - Formation
Medium Coniferous Rock (DD)
Exhibit Construction:
Number of animals allowed per exhibit: 1-3 with 60 squares for each adult.
Exhibit size (for 2 adults): 120 grid squares
Terrain (for exhibit with 120 grid squares):
96 Coniferous Floor, 12 Fresh Water, 12 Grass
Foliage (for exhibit with 120 grid squares):
10 grid squares should contain foliage.
Foliage that would give the most happiness: Walchian Conifer Tree (DD)
Since this is a small plant, greatest happiness will occur
if each of the 10 grid squares contains 4 of this plant.
Rocks (for exhibit with 120 grid squares):
10 Small Rock - Small, which is its most liked rock.