The Ceratopsia. Ceratopsia. Eig. 40.—A, Posterior view of right angular, surangular, and articular of type of Triceratops prorsus, No. 1822, Yale Museum; B, oblique front view of same; C, external view

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The Ceratopsia. Ceratopsia. Eig. 40.—A, Posterior view of right angular,  surangular, and articular of type of Triceratops prorsus, No. 1822, Yale  Museum; B, oblique front view of same; C, external view
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The Ceratopsia. Ceratopsia. Eig. 40.—A, Posterior view of right angular,  surangular, and articular of type of Triceratops prorsus, No. 1822, Yale  Museum; B, oblique front view of same; C, external view
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The Ceratopsia. Ceratopsia. Eig. 40.—A, Posterior view of right angular,  surangular, and articular of type of Triceratops prorsus, No. 1822, Yale  Museum; B, oblique front view of same; C, external view
Is Torosaurus Triceratops? Geometric Morphometric Evidence of Late Maastrichtian Ceratopsid Dinosaurs
The Ceratopsia. Ceratopsia. Eig. 40.—A, Posterior view of right angular,  surangular, and articular of type of Triceratops prorsus, No. 1822, Yale  Museum; B, oblique front view of same; C, external view
Forelimb posture in neoceratopsian dinosaurs: implications for gait and locomotion
The Ceratopsia. Ceratopsia. Eig. 40.—A, Posterior view of right angular,  surangular, and articular of type of Triceratops prorsus, No. 1822, Yale  Museum; B, oblique front view of same; C, external view
The oldest centrosaurine: a new ceratopsid dinosaur (Dinosauria: Ceratopsidae) from the Allison Member of the Menefee Formation (Upper Cretaceous, early Campanian), northwestern New Mexico, USA
The Ceratopsia. Ceratopsia. Eig. 40.—A, Posterior view of right angular,  surangular, and articular of type of Triceratops prorsus, No. 1822, Yale  Museum; B, oblique front view of same; C, external view
Phylogenetic History of Auroraceratops rugosus (Ceratopsia: Ornithischia) from the Lower Cretaceous of Gansu Province, China
The Ceratopsia. Ceratopsia. Eig. 40.—A, Posterior view of right angular,  surangular, and articular of type of Triceratops prorsus, No. 1822, Yale  Museum; B, oblique front view of same; C, external view
Appendicular skeleton of Protoceratops andrewsi (Dinosauria, Ornithischia): comparative morphology, ontogenetic changes, and the implications for non-ceratopsid ceratopsian locomotion [PeerJ]
The Ceratopsia. Ceratopsia. Eig. 40.—A, Posterior view of right angular,  surangular, and articular of type of Triceratops prorsus, No. 1822, Yale  Museum; B, oblique front view of same; C, external view
PDF) A reevaluation of the hyoid bones of Protoceratops andrewsi Granger and Gregory, 1923 (Ornithischia: Ceratopsia) and a review of hyoid elements in ornithischian dinosaurs
The Ceratopsia. Ceratopsia. Eig. 40.—A, Posterior view of right angular,  surangular, and articular of type of Triceratops prorsus, No. 1822, Yale  Museum; B, oblique front view of same; C, external view
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The Ceratopsia. Ceratopsia. Eig. 40.—A, Posterior view of right angular,  surangular, and articular of type of Triceratops prorsus, No. 1822, Yale  Museum; B, oblique front view of same; C, external view
Appendicular skeleton of Protoceratops andrewsi (Dinosauria, Ornithischia): comparative morphology, ontogenetic changes, and the implications for non-ceratopsid ceratopsian locomotion [PeerJ]
The Ceratopsia. Ceratopsia. Eig. 40.—A, Posterior view of right angular,  surangular, and articular of type of Triceratops prorsus, No. 1822, Yale  Museum; B, oblique front view of same; C, external view
Transitional evolutionary forms in chasmosaurine ceratopsid dinosaurs: evidence from the Campanian of New Mexico [PeerJ]

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