Its' color was meant to be green with brown and stripes spots and a white underbelly to match its' habitat and a pink neck in males for sexual display. It was to be portrayed with scales and osteoderms running down the length of the body. Leptoceratops was meant to appear in Saurian before it was scrapped. Its' best defense was likely just to run, although, to fight off an Acheroraptor, for example, it may have used its formidable bite, which would've broke bones, reminding the theories behind the brawls between Protoceratops and Velociraptor. Scrapped Female concept by Chris Masnaghetti.Īs an individual, Leptoceratops, a smallish herbivore, may have been quite vulnerable to the formidable predators of the Cretaceous period like juvenile Tyrannosaurusand maybe even Acheroraptor. This would suggest that while the ceratopsians descended into large quadrupedal herbivores, there was still an ecological niche where the more primitive ceratopsian body plan could still thrive. Leptoceratops lived much later than these ancestral forms as indicated by its entry into the fossil record at a time which would have seen Leptoceratops living in the same locations as the much larger Triceratops, in western North America between 67 million and 66 million years ago. It did not sport the dramatic horns and large neck frills that are common in its more advanced and better-known relatives, such as Triceratops. Leptoceratops also had a beaklike snout and a smallish neck frill. Leptoceratops had a very large head for its body size, and the skull often survives more easily as a fossil. Currently, it is believed that Leptoceratops was perfectly capable to walk and stand just on four legs, and probably alternated between quadrupedality and bipedality. Leptoceratops's front legs were shorter than its hind legs, leading to reasoning that it might have been able to stand or even walk on its hind legs, either for the purpose of reaching up for food sources, or running at speed, similar in fashion to how hadrosaur movement is interpreted. Between the shearing/crushing action of the teeth and the powerful jaws, Leptoceratops was probably able to chew tough plant matter. This shows that Leptoceratops chewed with a combination of shearing and crushing. The teeth are unusual in that the dentary teeth have dual wear facets, with a vertical wear facet where the maxillary teeth sheared past the crown, and a horizontal wear facet where the maxillary teeth crushed against the dentary teeth. The jaws were relatively short and deep and the jaw muscles would have inserted over the large parietosquamosal frill, giving Leptoceratops a powerful bite. This long, low-slung animal browsed on ground cover and other low plants like cycads and ferns. Though Leptoceratops was 6 to 9 feet (2 to 2.7 meters) long, it was only 2 to 3 feet (0.6 to 0.9 meters) high at the hips and weighted between 150 and 440 lbs (68 and 200 kilograms). Their skulls have been found in Alberta, Canada and Wyoming. Leptoceratops is an extinct genus of ceratopsian dinosaurs from the late Cretaceous Period (late Maastrichtian age, 66.8-66 Ma ago) of what is now Western North America. This means that animals only found in Wyoming, Montana or North Dakota will not be featured, nor those from only the lower rocks of Hell Creek (such as Leptoceratops)." N/A "With some leeway allowed for preservation bias, we will be focusing on the animals and plants found in this location.
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