Wilderness Encounters (Terra Nova): Difference between revisions
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|Triceratops (Solitary Bull) | |Triceratops (Solitary Bull) | ||
|A massive, scarred older male foraging alone. Extremely territorial; will charge if approached too closely. | |A massive, scarred older male foraging alone. Extremely territorial; will charge if approached too closely. | ||
Revision as of 20:16, 2 June 2026
| 01–05 | Triceratops (Solitary Bull) | A massive, scarred older male foraging alone. Extremely territorial; will charge if approached too closely. |
| 06–15 | Triceratops (Mating Pair) | A male and female moving through dense fern prairies. The male flashes a brightly patterned frill. |
| 16–25 | Triceratops (Nursery Herd) | A small group of 3–4 protective adult females guarding several small, stubby-horned juveniles. |
| 26–30 | Triceratops (Subadults) | Two young, rowdy individuals testing their strength by locking horns and pushing each other through the brush. |
| 31–35 | Triceratops (Carcass) | A recently deceased individual, drawing the attention of local scavengers and buzzing insects. |
| 36–40 | Tyrannosaurus rex (Adult) | A massive 8-ton solitary hunter actively stalking a herd or broadcasting deep, infrasonic warning rumbles. |
| 41–44 | Tyrannosaurus rex (Subadult) | A lean, long-legged 15-year-old "teenager". Faster than the adults; actively hunting smaller prey like Thescelosaurus. |
| 45–48 | Nanotyrannus lancensis (Hunting Pair) | A pair of fully mature, skeletally distinct "pygmy tyrants" hunting in tandem. |
| 49–50 | Nanotyrannus lethaeus (Solitary) | A lone adult representing the slightly larger, robust Nanotyrannus species (typified by the famous "Jane" specimen). It dashes through the undergrowth, pursuing hyper-fast prey like Thescelosaurus. |
| 51–52 | Tyrannosaurus rex (Scavenging) | An adult feeding on a fresh kill, aggressively snapping its massive jaws to intimidate any nearby Nanotyrannus pack or small raptor away from the meat. |
| 53–55 | Tyrannosaurus rex (Sleeping) | A well-fed adult resting in a shaded grove, snoring loudly enough to vibrate the nearby foliage. |
| 56–63 | Edmontosaurus annectens (Migratory Herd) | A vast, thundering group of dozens of duck-billed dinosaurs stripping the canopy and trumpeting loudly. |
| 64–67 | Edmontosaurus annectens (Solitary Old) | A massive, 12-meter-long old individual wallowing in a riverbank mud hole to soothe its skin. |
| 68–69 | Edmontosaurus (Nesting Site) | A communal nesting area on a sandbar, with flat-headed mothers tending to mounds filled with hatchlings. |
| 70–71 | Edmontosaurus (Injured/Sick) | A limping individual left behind by the herd, actively calling out—unknowingly signaling nearby predators. |
| 72–75 | Thescelosaurus (Foraging Group) | A family of 4–5 small, heavy-set ornithopods rooting through the leaf litter for roots and seeds like wild boars. |
| 76–77 | Thescelosaurus (Burrowing/Darting) | An individual excavating a den or bursting out of the ferns at extreme speed to flee an unseen threat. |
| 78–79 | Borealosuchus sternbergii | A 3-meter, broad-snouted croc basking on a muddy log. It will slide silently into the water if disturbed. |
| 80–81 | Champsosaurus laramiensis | A bizarre, 1.5-meter long-snouted reptile resembling a gharial. It sits motionless at the river bottom, waiting for fish. |
| 82–83 | Basilemys & Compsemys | Several massive, heavily textured land turtles lounging near a marsh, unbothered by browsing dinosaurs. |
| 84–85 | Brachychampsa montana | A short, blunt-snouted alligator variant hiding in the shallows, using specialized flat teeth to crush freshwater clams. |
| 86–87 | Giant Azhdarchid (Quetzalcoatlus sp.) | A giraffe-sized pterosaur stalking through the tall ferns on all fours, using its massive spear-like beak to snap up small dinosaurs. |
| 88–89 | Infernodrakon (Small Azhdarchid) | A medium-sized pterosaur (3-meter wingspan) landing on a sandy riverbank to look for stranded fish and small lizards. |
| 90–91 | Ornithomimus (Flock) | A group of 6–8 ostrich-like, toothless dinosaurs darting through open floodplains, snatching up insects and small lizards. |
| 92–93 | Anzu wyliei (Solitary) | A large, crested "Chicken from Hell" foraging for eggs, small mammals, or vegetation, flashing its vibrant arm feathers. |
| 94–95 | Struthiomimus (Pair) | Two highly alert, long-necked ornithomimids drinking from a stream, ears tuned for the sound of snapping twigs. |
| 96 | Ankylosaurus magniventris | A rare, walking fortress browsing on low shrubs. It swings its massive tail club warningly if startled. |
| 97 | Denversaurus (Nodosaurid) | A low-slung, heavily armored dinosaur covered in prominent lateral shoulder spikes, quietly chewing on tough ferns. |
| 98–99 | Acheroraptor temertyorum | A small, agile, bird-like dromaeosaur (raptor) hunting in pairs, flushing out small primitive mammals. |
| 100 | Roll on the Extreme Rarities Subtable (Below)You stumble across one of the most elusive or specialized inhabitants of the Lancian ecosystem. |