Triceratops https://kids.nationalgeographic.com/animals/prehistoric/facts/triceratops
This dino’s headgear likely impressed a mate.
Subscribe menu Triceratops might have tussled to impress other members of its group
This dino’s headgear likely impressed a mate.
Subscribe menu Triceratops might have tussled to impress other members of its group
Spinosaurus Spinosaurus Learn More Stegosaurus Kids Stegosaurus Stegosaurus Learn More Triceratops
Guess the letters to spell out the secret words.
Letter Predator Guess all the letters to spell out the secret words before the Triceratops
Are you a cunning carnivore or a happy-go-lucky herbivore? Take this quiz to find out where you fall in the dinosaur food chain.
Zhangjiajie National Park: KingWu, iStockphoto; Tyrannosaurus rex: MR1805, iStockphoto; Triceratops
This dino had a nine-inch-thick skull.
Pachycephalosaurus walked alongside Triceratops, Ankylosaurus, and Tyrannosaurus
It had feathers, but this dino couldn’t fly.
The group spots a Protoceraptops, an older cousin of Triceratops.
You better beware this dino’s tail.
Some scientists think they were used to attract mates, similar to the frill on a Triceratops
Discover why this ancient predator is known as the king of the dinosaurs.
what’s now western North America, following its nose: The animal sniffs a tasty Triceratops
Read about the dinosaurs uncovered in this story from Nat Geo Kids.
Ferocious Triceratops fought off enemies with its three dangerous horns and a bony