Coelophysis
Living over 200 million years ago in the Triassic Period, Coelophysis was an early meat-eating dinosaur that may have hunted in packs.
Coelophysis probably ate small animals, but may have hunted in packs to take down larger prey. In addition to its sharp teeth, its arms and claws were well adapted for grasping its prey.
Coelophysis lived in a floodplain environment that may have had extreme dry and wet seasons, with heavy competition during the dry seasons, and monsoons during the wet.
Coelophysis was a slender meat-eating dinosaur. Its slight build meant it was likely quite fast. It had a long neck and tail, and a narrow, pointed head with forward facing eyes, which gave it good depth perception and overall excellent vision.
It’s possible Coelophysis had feathers, or early feather-like structures called pycnofibers, covering its body.
Length: Up to 3 meters (approximately 10 feet) in length
Coelophysis was first described by paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope in 1889. The name Coelophysis, meaning “hollow form”, refers to the dinosaur’s hollow vertebrae bones. The earliest Coelophysis remains weren’t very complete, but a massive amount of Coelophysis skeletons, which may have perished all at once in a flash flood, was discovered in 1947 in New Mexico.
References
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coelophysis
Paul, G. (2016). The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs, 2nd Edition. Princeton, New Jersey: University Press Princeton.
Safari Ltd Coelophysis Toys
Wild Safari Prehistoric World Coelophysis Figure