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The Land Before Time series bears countless inaccuracies in its depiction of the Mesozoic Era. The following lists contain the various inaccuracies sighted by fans.

The series itself

  • Due to the series' setting in what is presumably intended to be the Maastrichtian age of the late Cretaceous Period (72.1 – 66 million years ago), many of the animals featured are misplaced, both in time and space. Within the main cast, examples include:
  • Most "Sharpteeth", most notably dromaeosaurs (referred to as "Fast Biters" in the television series), lack a feathery coating likely present in many coelurosaurian theropods.
  • In early films, Sharpteeth are often shown in a tripodal pose, with pronated, "kangaroo" hands. Though the issue of tripod dinosaurs has largely regressed (though not entirely), the issue of hand pronation persists into recent films.
  • Ceratopsians, sauropods, stegosaurs, and ankylosaurs throughout the franchise are depicted with elephantine forefeet. They are also frequently portrayed with low-hanging tails, when they should have elevated tails.
    Littlefoot with Grandparents (TLBT 2)

    Littlefoot consults his grandparents for help on how to raise babies. His grandparents are shown in the water, an issue discussed in the left paragraph.

  • On occasion, sauropods (notably Littlefoot's grandparents in certain scenes) can be seen up to their abdomens in water. The hypothesis that sauropods were primarily aquatic was debunked long ago, even before the films came to be.
    • Similarly, hadrosaurs, or "Swimmers", obtain their names from their largely marine lifestyles within the series. Hadrosaurs are not known to have been aquatic, or even semi-aquatic.
  • Sauropod dinosaurs are incorrectly depicted with nostrils on the top of their heads. They are also portrayed chewing their food, which real sauropods are incapable of.
  • The Apatosaurus in the series have some noteworthy mistakes.
    • The tail is incorrectly shaped. It should be very long and whip-like.
    • The skulls of most Apatosaurus are shaped like that of a Camarasaurus, when they should be shaped somewhat like a horse's. The only exception to this is Bron, whose head is shaped more like that of a real Apatosaurus.
    • The necks are rather thin. Real Apatosaurus, along with Brontosaurus, have very muscular necks. Also, while this is fairly recent, some paleontologists have suggested the necks might have possessed 2 rows of keratinous spikes underneath, based on an idea the necks were also used as weapons due to their muscular build.
  • The armor of Ankylosaurus is incorrectly designed. It should not have large spikes protruding from its sides and its scutes should be more blunt and variable in size.
  • Most ankylosaurs in the films are portrayed with splayed limbs, when they should have their legs held underneath their bodies like all dinosaurs.
    • Similarly, ceratopsians and stegosaurs are shown having their front legs sprawled like in outdated portraits, instead of having them erect.
  • Nearly all animals throughout the franchise are depicted with having small ridges on their backs, even when the real animals do not possess anything that would suggest the presence of a ridge.
  • Petrie and his kin are often shown eating Tree Stars or other greenery throughout the series, while real Pteranodon were more likely to consume fish. They also would have webbed feet, as they were strong swimmers as well as flyers.
  • In general, pterosaurs throughout the series have several inaccuracies.
    • Beginning in The Land Before Time II: The Great Valley Adventure, pterosaurs are depicted as largely bipedal. The skeletons of pterosaurs were built to accommodate quadrupedal locomotion on land, not bipedal.
    • Most of the pterosaurs seen in the franchise are somewhat lacking in pycnofibres, the fur-like structures that covered the body of the real animals. They are usually portrayed with a body covering (given the darker shading), a ring of fluff around the neck, and a naked head, similar to modern-day vultures. The only exception to this is Sordes, which was depicted with a full coat of them in The Land Before Time.
    • Pterosaurs generally have thin, unmuscled necks as opposed to the robust necks of real pterosaurs.
    • Pterosaurs also display extended parental care (though like real pterosaurs the young fly from birth).
  • Most of the dinosaurs, barring some of the more recently designed creatures, are seen with noticeable ears, when in reality, a dinosaur ear was just a hole on the side of its head.
  • Most hadrosaurs in the films are seen primarily walking on two legs. While they could do this in real life, hadrosaurs were most comfortable on four legs, only standing up on two legs in order to run away from predators. All the hadrosaurs are also portrayed with visible fingers, when in reality the fingers were embedded underneath the skin and fused into a hoof-like structure.
  • The tail spikes of stegosaurs are portrayed pointing upwards, rather than sideways.
  • The Stegosaurus are depicted with rather short necks, but now that a mostly-complete specimen was discovered in 2014, their necks would have been fairly long in real life.
  • Feathered dinosaurs are shown having their wings ending at the wrist. In real life, the wing is all the way attached to the second finger.
  • Tar pits are seen throughout many of the Land Before Time films. However, tar pits didn't form in the Mesozoic era. They first formed in the Cenozoic era, the age of mammals. They are also usually shown as a big pool of tar, however real tar pits had a layer of water or sand over the tar. A more accurate choice would have been quicksand or mud, which is known to have trapped several dinosaurs in Mesozoic times.
  • Grass is frequently seen in the films, though it didn't develop until the Cenozoic era. However, ancestors of grass have been found in fossilized titanosaur dung.

From The Land Before Time (1988)

  • A Dimetrodon is seen shortly after Littlefoot, Ducky, and Petrie befriend each other. Dimetrodon was a synapsid; a close relative of mammals which lived during the early Permian period, from 295 to 272 million years ago, long before dinosaurs came to be. The Dimetrodon is also portrayed with a forked tongue akin to a snake's or a monitor lizard's, something the real animal never had due to its close relationship with mammals. Furthermore, new studies show the sail's covering was not as extensive as previously thought. In addition, Dimetrodon could have been somewhat more mammalian in appearance than in the film.
  • It is highly unlikely that the "Domehead" dinosaur Pachycephalosaurus, shown pursuing Cera, was openly predatory. However, some scientists have proposed that P. wyomingensis was omnivorous due to the shape of its teeth. Perhaps noting this, one of the novelizations depicts the attack as a revenge strike in response to a previous slight.
    • Similarly, the Pachycephalosaurus are also depicted with sharp, dromaeosaurian claws on their feet and hands. In reality, pachycephalosaurs had small claws, unlikely to be of much use. This is fixed in later appearances.
    • The Pachycephalosaurus are also portrayed with large forelimbs. In reality, pachycephalosaurs have fairly small forelimbs. This problem is not seen with the Prenocephale in the TV series.
  • Struthiomimus were most likely not egg-thieves, as depicted in the film. They should also be covered in ostrich-like feathers, with wings covering its arms.
  • The Proganochelys in this film has a frog-like tongue and has a quadrupedal lizard-like gait, neither of which the real animal had.
  • The Megalochelys in this film tries to eat Ducky despite being a herbivore. It is also portrayed with a jagged mouth, which the real animal did not have.
  • Petrie is seen climbing a tree in this film, which the real animal was unable to do.
  • The main characters are seen hatching out of their eggs in under a minute, while real animals usually take several hours to hatch. This was probably done to speed up the pace of the movie.
  • Tyrannosaurus is not believed to have been able to jump the way Sharptooth is shown jumping in the film. This may have been based on Ceratosaurus jumping in a Ray Harryhausen and Willis OBrien film/documentary about animals, including dinosaurs, The Animal World (1956).
  • Sharptooth is seen standing and walking up straight, whereas modern paleontological thought dictates that Tyrannosaurus stood and walked with its body approximately parallel to the ground (although Sharptooth is sometimes shown with this posture in some scenes).
  • The Triadobatrachus which Littlefoot encounters is seen as being able to jump, causing it to be called a "Hopper." However, the back legs of the real animal weren't strong enough to allow it to jump.
  • The Hylonomus and Metriorhynchus in this film both have a sail, which they never had in real life.
  • The Metriorhynchus in the film is also portrayed as very fish-like. In real life, it would have resembled a crocodile with a streamlined body and a tail fluke.
  • The Edaphosaurus seen fleeing from the earthquake have sharp teeth, similar to their close relative Dimetrodon, unlike the peg-like teeth of the real animal.
  • Rooter looks little like a real Scolosaurus, having a nonexistent stubby horn on his snout and two spiky prongs on his tail club, akin to early depictions of the animal. In fact, one novelization of the film calls him an old turtle. In real life, Scolosaurus would have been identical to Euoplocephalus (which it was formerly synonymous with) but with longer, downward-facing horns.
  • The Dimorphodon in this film has no teeth, which the real animal definitely had.
  • Both the Sordes and the Dimorphodon in the film lack the diamond-shaped vane on the tip of the tail.
  • The Steropodon depicted in the film has large ears, a feature which the real animal did not have. It also appears mouse-like, while the real animal looked more like a modern platypus.
  • The Diplodocus have mouths shaped more like beaks, and their tails are too short and lack the whip-like shape. This is fixed in later appearances.

From The Land Before Time II: The Great Valley Adventure (1994)

  • Struthiomimus ("Egg Stealers") were most likely not egg-thieves, as depicted in the film, and should have feathers.
  • Beginning in this film, Spike (a Spiketail) is, oddly, depicted without a thagomizer.
  • Chomper, the baby Tyrannosaurus rex, should have a more slender skull, and a layer of down. He's also missing a dewclaw on each foot, in contrast to the adult Tyrannosaurus.
  • The Nothosaurus in this film is portrayed as having a long serpentine body and a line of spikes running down its back, giving the the animal a draconian appearance. Though Nothosaurus did have a streamlined, otter-like body and was well adept for swimming, its body was unlike that of a snake, and did not have spikes on its back. The habitat of the animal is also depicted as barren and slimy, but in reality, Nothosaurus lived in a lush ocean ecosystem.
  • The Scutosaurus in this film is depicted with a horn on its nose, which the real animal did not have.
  • The Moschops in this film is depicted with a beak, which the real animal did not have.
  • The Euoplocephalus in this film has armor that looks nothing like what the real animal had. It possesses nonexistent large spikes along its sides, and its osteoderms are much too smoothed over.
  • The Kuehneosaurus seen in the opening of this film is depicted with "wings" similar to those of a flying squirrel, when it actually had "wings" similar to those of a draco lizard.
  • The Plateosaurus seen in the opening of this film is shown with a tripodal stance, when it actually held its spine horizontally. It is also shown with theropod-like hands with long fingers, when the real animal had vaguely human-like hands with a claw on its thumb.

From The Land Before Time III: The Time of the Great Giving (1995)

  • More anachronistic main characters:
    • Hyp, the Hypsilophodon (from the Barremian stage of the early Cretaceous, 130 to 125 million years ago).
    • Mutt, the Muttaburrasaurus (from the Albian and Cenomanian ages, in both the early and late Cretaceous, 112 to 96 million years ago).
    • Nod, the Nodosaurus (Nodosaurus lived in a similar time span to that of Muttaburrasaurus, 100 to 97 million years ago).
  • The film's Velociraptor is depicted as almost identical in appearance to the raptors from Jurassic Park, with the basic appearance of a featherless Deinonychus and the size of an Achillobator. In reality, Velociraptor has a long skull with a narrow snout, was the size of a coyote, had feathers covering a good portion of its body (including wings and a tail fan), and was not nearly as intelligent as portrayed in the film.
    Hyp01

    Hyp

  • Hyp and his father hardly resemble real life Hypsilophodon. They are very large for their proposed species, and have rigid, defined jaw lines. Hypsilophodon was, in reality, not much larger than a medium sized dog, and had a small beak. Impressions from other, similarly sized ornithischians also suggest that H. foxii was covered in a layer of spiny down.
  • Mutt looks more like a generic hadrosaur than a Muttaburrasaurus, the iguanodont genus that he is based on. He also lacks the thumb spike that the real animal was known to have.
  • The Iguanodon are missing the prehensile "pinkie" used for grabbing, and its iconic thumb spike is less pronounced than in real life. These mistakes persist in later appearances.
  • The two Dromaeosaurus seen in this film are significantly less feathered than their real life counterparts, only having a set of quills running down their necks. The Ornitholestes shown in the film share the same issues.
  • The five Bananogmius seen in this film have much shorter sails compared to the real animal. It is also unknown how they can survive in freshwater, seeing as they are a saltwater species.
  • The Hypacrosaurus is portrayed without a duck-bill.

From The Land Before Time IV: Journey through the Mists (1996)

  • Main character anachronisms:
    • Dil, the Deinosuchus (Deinosuchus is only known from the Campanian stage of the late Cretaceous, 80 to 73 million years ago).
    • Ichy, the Ichthyornis (Ichthyornis lived from the Cenomanian up until the Coniacian, 95 to 85 million years ago).
  • A Hydrotherosaurus appears as a Swimming Sharptooth in the film. Hydrotherosaurus only ate small fish, and would not attempt to attack a Deinosuchus like Dil. It also appears in freshwater despite being a saltwater creature. Finally, it is also able to lift its entire neck and much of its body out of the water, while the real animal, and all plesiosaurs in general, could only lift their head out of the water before gravity and their weight pulled them back down.
  • Ichy, the Ichthyornis seen in this film, lives far away from the ocean and tries to attack small dinosaurs, while the real animal was a seabird and ate mostly fish, though it would likely have scavenged washed-up carcasses if necessary.
  • The Mosasaurus in this film has a short tail with no tail fluke, unlike the real animal. A recent study has also concluded that many marine reptiles, like Mosasaurus, were black in color, while the animal in the film is a stone grey.
  • Archie, the Archelon seen in this film, lives in a cave far away from the ocean, the location where the real animal lived and found its food.
  • The Edmontosaurus seen in this film lacks the small head crest that the real animal had. However, this wasn't discovered until years after the film's release.

From The Land Before Time V: The Mysterious Island (1997)

  • Bizarrely, Chomper is depicted with three fingers, as opposed to two. This error persists into future installments in the franchise.
  • A Giganotosaurus is featured in the film. G. carolini lived in a very short section of the Cenomanian age, long before the days of T. rex. Giganotosaurus also lived in South America, an entire hemisphere away from where T. rex fossils have been discovered. Giganotosaurus also should have a bigger, longer skull than in the movie. It should also have four toes, including a dewclaw connected to the ankle.
  • In reality, it unlikely that a pair of Tyrannosaurus, together with a baby, could survive on a small island, as there wouldn't be enough to eat to sustain them, especially with a Giganotosaurus also on the island.
  • Elsie, the Elasmosaurus in this film is depicted raising her entire neck and body out of the water. The real animal, along with most plesiosaurs, was only able to lift its head out of the water, before gravity and its weight pulled it back down.
    • She is also depicted with a shark-like fin on her head, something that is completely unknown in the real animal.
    • She is also depicted with flat teeth. The real animal had sharp teeth.
  • The Sharptooth Flyer (Pterodactylus) seen in this film is seen carrying Ducky with one of her hind limbs. This is impossible, as pterosaur feet were not at all built for grabbing objects.
    • Likewise, it is also seen in this film as a large predatory pterosaur who hunts small dinosaurs. In real life, the animal was small and ate insects. It is also temporally misplaced, as the real Pterodactylus lived in the Tithonian age, 150 to 148 million years ago.
    • It is also portrayed without the large, fleshy crest on its head, though this discovery was made years after the film's release.

From The Land Before Time VI: The Secret of Saurus Rock (1998)

LBT Allosaurus-1-

Secret of Saurus Rock's problematic depiction of A. fragillus

  • Anachronisms:
    • Doc, the Diplodocus (D. carnegii lived in the Kimmeridgian stage of the late Jurassic, 154 to 152 million years ago.)
    • Mrs. Maia, the Maiasaura (Maiasaura, though a product of the late Cretaceous, lived in the Campanian age, around 75 million years ago.)
  • The film's Allosaurus, the Browridge Sharptooth, has multiple problems:
    • It is depicted with only two visible fingers. This can be considered a highly elementary mistake, as the real dinosaur's three fingers are one of its most notable traits. It is also portrayed with only three visible toes, missing the dewclaw on the ankle.
      • Strangely, it is shown with three fingers and four toes in some scenes. It is unknown as to whether the two fingers and three toes were intended, or the three fingers and four toes.
    • Aside from a fleshy ridge surrounding its eye, the Sharptooth's head is shaped like that of a T. rex. The real Allosaurus had a curved, sloping skull.
    • It is depicted as being the same size as a T. rex, when it would have been smaller in reality.
      • However, the large size of this Allosaurus could have been based off of Saurophaganax, a larger dinosaur that was a close relative of Allosaurus. The size of this Allosaurus may also be based on the fact that many believe Saurophaganax is the same species as Allosaurus, which could boost Allosaurus maximum size.
    • It is temporally misplaced. Allosaurus lived in the Kimmeridgian and Turonian stages of the late Jurassic, from 155 to 150 million years ago.
  • The Postosuchus seen in the opening narration is depicted as a quadrupedal, water-going creature. The real animal was terrestrial and most likely a biped. These errors persist into the The Great Longneck Migration and The Great Day of the Flyers, where it is again shown as a semiaquatic quadruped.

From The Land Before Time VII: The Stone of Cold Fire (2000)

  • Anachronisms:
    • Sierra, the Cearadactylus (C. atrox lived in the Albian stage of the early Cretaceous, 112 million years ago.)
    • Rinkus, the Rhamphorhynchus (Rhamphorhynchus lived from 150 to 148 million years ago, in the Tithonian stage of the late Jurassic.)
  • Sierra is seen grasping Ducky with one of his hind limbs. This is impossible, as pterosaur feet were not at all built for grabbing objects.
  • In this film, Archaeopteryx is capable of flight, which it shouldn't be able to do, as powered flight of birds had not yet evolved. They also appear to lack the three fingers on each wing.
  • Rinkus is much larger than a real Rhamphorhynchus, which was only crow-sized.
  • Rinkus' tail has been shown to be extremely flexible. In reality, Rhamphorynchus had a stiff tail that enabled it to make more agile turns in flight.
  • Kentrosaurus should have spikes protruding from their shoulders.
  • The Gallimimus (Rainbow Faces) are depicted with teeth, and scaly skin. Real Gallimimus lacked teeth, and almost certainly had an ostrich-like covering of feathers.
  • The Styracosaurus have a shorter nose horn than in real life, and its distinctive spiked frill does not quite match what the real animal had. This error persists into future installments.
  • In a story told by Grandpa Longneck, explaining the elders' distrust of Pterano, a Deinonychus pack is said to be responsible for the massacre of an entire group of dinosaurs led by the pterosaur. Their depiction is inaccurate for multiple reasons:
    • They are depicted without feathers. This is somewhat excusable, as the film was likely produced prior to the discovery that most dromaeosaurs were covered in feathering.
    • They are, bizarrely, depicted with only two fingers. All known dromaeosaurids, with the exception of Balaur bondoc (which is likely not even a dromaeosaur), are known to have three fingers. They also have only three toes, lacking the dew claw on the ankle.
    • It is extremely unlikely that even a large pack of Deinonychus, let alone the group of three depicted in the film, would be capable of taking down the amount of dinosaurs implied in the scene, let alone dinosaurs such as Ankylosaurus and Styracosaurus. They are also able to take hits from a club tail without injury, something that would shatter their skulls.
    • They are, as per most creatures in The Land Before Time, temporally misplaced. Deinonychus lived in the Aptian and Albian stages of the early Cretaceous, 115 to 108 million years ago.
  • Quetzalcoatlus had a larger head and shorter wings than the one in the film, and its head should also have a crest. It is also now known to be a terrestrial macro-predator.

From The Land Before Time VIII: The Big Freeze (2001)

  • The Camptosaurus in this film is portrayed as semi-aquatic and resembling a prosauropod, unlike the real animal.

From The Land Before Time IX: Journey to Big Water (2002)

  • In this film, as seen in The Stone of Cold Fire, Archaeopteryx is capable of flight, which it shouldn't be able to do, as powered flight of birds had not yet evolved. Also like in The Stone of Cold Fire, they are missing the three fingers on their wings.
  • The Elasmosaurus seen in this film have the same shark-like fin on their heads as Elsie, which the real animal didn't have.
  • Seahorses are seen in Mo's Home, despite the fact that seahorses didn't evolve until the Neogene period of the Cenozoic.
  • The film's Liopleurodon is much larger than the real animal, about twice the size (the real Liopleurodon was about 25 feet long). This may have been a reference to Walking With Dinosaurs, which erroneously portrayed the animal as 25 meters long. However, it wasn't quite as large as the one from the BBC programme.

From The Land Before Time X: The Great Longneck Migration (2003)

  • As in The Secret of Saurus Rock, the Postosuchus shown in the opening narration is depicted as a quadrupedal, water-going creature. The real animal was terrestrial and most likely a biped. These errors persist into The Great Day of the Flyers, where it is again shown in the opening narration as a semiaquatic quadruped.
  • The Compsognathus seen in this film are depicted without feathery coats.
  • The back osteoderms on the Saltasaurus seen in this film appear to be more like spots than scale-like structures. These errors persist into Journey of the Brave.
  • The Amargasaurus seen in this film have sails on their necks. While scientists did believe this to be true when this film was made, it is now generally believed that the real animal's neck spines were exposed to better permit neck mobility.

From The Land Before Time XI: Invasion of the Tinysauruses (2005)

  • In this film, the adult Mussaurus are similar in size to or smaller than the younger members of the species, when they should be larger. The Mussaurus also look more like generic sauropods, when they should resemble something like Plateosaurus.
  • The Utahraptor that debut in XI share most of the same issues as the Deinonychus from The Stone of Cold Fire, being depicted as featherless, two-fingered, three-toed creatures. They also have a couple other issues:
    • Their necks are too long, and their limbs are too thin. Utahraptor was a rather strangely built dromaeosaur, having a large head, a short, thick neck, thick limbs, and a stocky body.
    • They are temporally misplaced. Utahraptor lived during the Barremian stage of the early Cretaceous, around 126 million years ago.

From The Land Before Time XII: The Great Day of the Flyers (2007)

  • After the Universal logo is shown in the opening, the continents merge back into the supercontinent, Pangaea. Pangaea existed during the late Paleozoic and early Mesozoic eras, whereas the events in the franchise take place during the late Mesozoic era.
  • As in The Secret of Saurus Rock and The Great Longneck Migration, the Postosuchus shown in the opening narration is depicted as a quadrupedal, water-going creature. The real animal was terrestrial and most likely a biped.
  • Guido, the Microraptor character introduced in the film, has a number of issues:
    • He is depicted with a toothless, parrot-like beak. Actual Microraptor heads were much more similar to those of other dromaeosaurs, being slender with sharp teeth.
    • He is shown with teal and green feathers, whereas recent studies have inferred that Microraptor was an iridescent black, similar to a crow or raven.
    • He is depicted with wings on his arms, and his arms only. One of the most defining features of Microraptor is that it bore four wings, on both its arms and its legs.
    • He is depicted with a humanoid body plan. The real Microraptor had a bird-like body as with every other dromaeosaur.
    • He is missing both a dew claw on his ankle and the raised toe-claw on his feet.
    • He has four fingers instead of three.
  • Both the Scaphognathus and Eudimorphodon in this film are depicted as much larger than both of the real animals. They also seem to lack teeth.
  • The Cryptoclidus seen in this film have no teeth, unlike the real animal, although this may be because of their imaginary nature or their presence in a musical number. They are also seen living in freshwater, unlike the real animal, which would have lived in saltwater.
  • The Spinosaurus depicted in the film has multiple issues, largely due to having been superseded by recent discoveries:
    • It is depicted as a fast, agile runner. Though it is unclear whether or not the recent neotype is valid, some scientists believe that, with the newly discovered short legs of the creature, it would likely be very slow and awkward on land.
    • Perhaps because of its short legs, it would have had a more upright posture, with the neck held vertically like a duck or a pelican.
    • Its skull is reminiscent of Suchomimus, lacking the real animal's nasal crest and the kink in its premaxilla (upper jaw).
    • Its nostrils are located on the tip of its snout, when they should be placed near its eyes.
    • It is, akin to the series' Utahraptor, Deinonychus, and Allosaurus, depicted with only two fingers and only three toes. Real life Spinosaurus had three fingers, likely with a large claw on the first finger, and four toes, with the dew claw touching the ground.
    • Its sail is similar to that of a Dimetrodon, and lacks the recently discovered kink.
    • It is depicted as a terrestrial predator, whereas the real animal is now known to be largely aquatic and most likely had webbed feet. Even during the time the film was made, it was known to have been a fish-eater, but it may have occasionally hunted small dinosaurs and pterosaurs like the one in the film does.
    • Finally, it is temporally misplaced. Spinosaurus lived from 112 to 97 million years ago, during the Albian and Cenomanian stages of the middle Cretaceous.

From The Land Before Time XIII: The Wisdom of Friends (2007)

Beipiaosaurus Doofah Comparison

Doofah, compared to a restoration of a real Beipiaosaurus

  • The Yellow Bellies carry only a very vague resemblance to the dinosaur Beipiaosaurus, which they are explicitly stated to be in promotional materials, for various reasons:
    • Their claws are much too short. B. inexpectus was a therizinosaur, a type of theropod dinosaurs known for having very long, sharp claws.
    • Yellow Bellies carry a striking resemblance to the recently extinct Dodo, while their real life counterparts own a body plan much more resemblant of related ornithomimids and tyrannosaurs, resembling an avian bear to a degree.
    • Though correctly depicted with feathers, their feathers are depicted as being restricted to their rumps and the tops of their heads. They should be fully covered in hair-like plumage.
    • Oddly, the Yellow Bellies completely lack a tail, aside from a "ponytail" of feathers sprouting from their rumps.
    • The Yellow Bellies have four fingers on each hand, instead of just three like in real life. They also have only three toes, lacking the dew claw which touches the ground.
    • Last but not least, they are also temporally misplaced: Beipiaosaurus inexpectus lived in the Aptian stage of the early Cretaceous, 124 million years ago.
  • The Baryonyx pack featured in the film have robust skulls, with nostrils placed on the end of the snout instead of near the eyes. They're also inconsistently drawn with three fingers (the correct number) or four fingers, none of which having the famous enlarged claw. The dew claw on the Baryonyx is also positioned high up near the leg, and not on the ankle where it should be. Also, as with Spinosaurus, they should be living near bodies of water given their largely piscivorous diet.

From the TV series

General

  • Ruby and the other Oviraptor are too large for their species (closer in size to Citipati than Oviraptor), and are somewhat lacking in feathers. They are also portrayed with four fingers when they should have only three.

In the Episodes

  • The Stegoceras seen in the episodes "The Cave of Many Voices" and "The Great Log Running Game" are depicted with only two digits per limb, unlike the three digits seen in the real animal.
  • The baby Limusaurus seen in "The Cave of Many Voices", have no teeth. The real animal had small teeth as babies that it lost when it became an adult. However, this was only discovered after the episode aired.
  • In "The Cave of Many Voices", Chomper states that Red Claw won't notice the gang if they stay still. In real life, Tyrannosaurus rex had extremely good binocular vision and could see its prey even if they weren't moving.
    • However, this is likely just a reference to the 1993 film Jurassic Park, where the T. rex suffers from the same limitation, and Red Claw begins to use his nose to sniff them out anyway.
  • The Protoceratops seen in the episode, "The Hidden Canyon", has a nose horn, a feature that the real animal lacked. This is likely due to it being an upscaled and color-changed model of Cera.
  • The Herrerasaurus seen in "The Lonely Journey" are depicted with a large "killing claw" on their back feet, a feature which is only known to exist in dromaeosaurids.
  • The Sinornithomimus (Hidden Runner) from the episode, "The Spooky Nighttime Adventure", is depicted with only two fingers on each hand and only two toes on each foot; actual Sinornithomimus had three-toed feet and three claws per hand. Hidden Runner is also naked; he should be covered in feathers, not unlike those of an ostrich.
  • In the episode, "Stranger From the Mysterious Above", an herbivorous Microceratus (the Great Hideous Beast) is seen terrorizing a group of Ceratogaulus. This is scientifically inaccurate for multiple reasons:
    • Being a small, peaceful herbivore, Microceratus would have very little reason to attack a small colony of mammals.
      • However, it's implied that it was terrorizing the Ceratogaulus simply for their food.
    • The hands of the Microceratus are very different than what the real animal had. They are drawn as resembling a theropod's, with three-fingered hands.
    • Both of the animals are temporally misplaced. Microceratus lived in the Turonian, 90 million years ago, while Ceratogaulus lived during the Neogene period of the Cenozoic.
  • The Rutiodon pack seen in the episode, "The Amazing Threehorn Girl", are too large compared to the real animal. Their nostrils are also placed on the tip of its snout like a more advanced crocodilian, when they should be placed near their eyes. They are also temporally misplaced, as Rutiodon lived in the Carnian age of the Late Triassic, 228 million years ago.
  • Swooper the Harpactognathus, from "The Hermit of Black Rock", should have a crest that extends to the tip of his beak. He should also have sharp needle-like teeth, and a carnivorous diet as opposed to an herbivorous one.

From The Land Before Time XIV: Journey of the Brave (2016)

  • Etta the Pteranodon is portrayed as a sizable character, with a large crest. These two traits are only known from male Pteranodon, even though Etta is a female. She also has four small fingers on each of her wings, when she should only have three.
    • She also (perhaps curiously, given their presence on the series' other Pteranodon) completely lacks pycnofibres.
  • The Yutyrannus pair featured in this film have four fingers on each hand, when they should have only three and are somewhat lacking in feathers. They are also, as per most creatures in The Land Before Time, temporally misplaced; Yutyrannus hailed from the Barremian stage of the Early Cretaceous, approximately 125 million years ago.
  • Carnotaur chase kids

    Journey of the Brave's depiction of Carnotaurus

    The Carnotaurus featured in the film has several inaccuracies:
    • It is depicted with visible fingers. C. sastrei, alongside most other abelisaurids, did not have visible appendages on their forelimbs, with their arms having severely atrophied down the evolutionary path.
      • Similarly, it is depicted with three fingers; actual Carnotaurus had four fingers.
    • Its arms are depicted as being longer than in real life, and the arms face forward instead of being pulled backward like in the real animal.
    • It is depicted with large, forward facing horns, while the real animal had short horns which faced either upward or sideways, depending on the depiction.
    • It is depicted as large and stocky, while the real animal was smaller and had a leaner body to allow it to run faster.
    • In the movie, it was far more agile than we believe they were.
  • Both the Yutyrannus and the Carnotaurus have very "shrinkwrapped" skulls, being depicted with visible antiorbital fenestrae and no lips. This is a practice that has been highly contested in recent years.
  • Though confirmed to be a Nothronychus by official media, Wild Arms is much smaller than the real creature. He also has short, fingernail-like claws as opposed to long, sharp claws, as well as scant feathers. He's also missing the dew claw which touches the ground.
  • The Ornithomimus should have feathers, and only three fingers, as opposed to four.
  • The Gasparinisaura featured in this film are depicted as being able to dig, something that the real animal was likely incapable of doing.
  • At the beginning of the movie, a T. rex and a Stegosaurus are shown fighting. In reality, they lived millions of years apart, even longer than the time distance between T. rex and humans.
    • However, this is likely just a reference to the Disney movie Fantasia, which features the same anachronistic fight between these two dinosaurs.
  • As in The Great Longneck Migration, the back osteoderms on the Saltasaurus seen in this film appear to be more like spots instead of scale-like structures.

Anachronisms

Many of the creatures seen in the films and television series are anachronistic, as they didn't live in the Late Cretaceous period where the franchise is set. This section lists all known anachronisms in order of the time period they actually belong to.

Ediacran

  • Cyclomedusa

Cambrian

Ordivician

Silurian

Devonian

Carboniferous

  • Archimylacris
  • Arthropleura
  • Eryops
  • Greererpeton
  • Hylonomus
  • Ianthasaurus
  • Ichthyostega
  • Janassa
  • Meganeura
  • Megarachne
  • Orthacanthus
  • Petrolacosaurus
  • Sandalodus
  • Trilobite

Permian

  • Cacops
  • Dimetrodon
  • Diplocaulus
  • Edaphosaurus
  • Eryops
  • Estemmenosuchus
  • Hovasaurus
  • Janassa
  • Moschops
  • Orthacanthus
  • Pareiasaurus
  • Platyhystrix
  • Prionosuchus
  • Protorosaurus
  • Scutosaurus
  • Trilobite

Triassic

  • Aeger
  • Coelophysis
  • Dapedium
  • Diphydontosaurus
  • Drepanosaurus
  • Eoraptor
  • Eudimorphodon
  • Euparkeria
  • Herrerasaurus
  • Hyperodapedon
  • Hypsognathus
  • Icarosaurus
  • Isanosaurus
  • Kuehneosaurus
  • Lagosuchus
  • Marasuchus
  • Megazostrodon
  • Mussaurus
  • Nothosaurus
  • Ornithosuchus
  • Peteinosaurus
  • Placochelys
  • Placodus
  • Planocephalosaurus
  • Plateosaurus
  • Poposaurus
  • Postosuchus
  • Preondactylus
  • Proganochelys
  • Rutiodon
  • Saltopus
  • Semionotus
  • Triadobatrachus
  • Trilophosaurus

Jurassic

  • Aeger
  • Allosaurus
  • Amphicoelias
  • Apatosaurus
  • Archaeolepis
  • Archaeopteryx
  • Ardeosaurus
  • Barapasaurus
  • Barosaurus
  • Blapsium
  • Brachiosaurus
  • Brachytrachelopan
  • Brontosaurus
  • Camarasaurus
  • Camptosaurus
  • Campylognathoides
  • Cetiosaurus
  • Chialingosaurus
  • Chungkingosaurus
  • Coelophysis
  • Compsognathus
  • Cryptoclidus
  • Dacentrurus
  • Dapedium
  • Dicraeosaurus
  • Dimorphodon
  • Diplodocus
  • Dryosaurus
  • Elaphrosaurus
  • Eryon
  • Euhelopus
  • Europasaurus
  • Germanodactylus
  • Giraffatitan
  • Glyptops
  • Goniopholis
  • Haplocanthosaurus
  • Harpactognathus
  • Hesperosaurus
  • Heterodontosaurus
  • Isaberrysaura
  • Jobaria
  • Kaatedocus
  • Karaurus
  • Kentrosaurus
  • Kotasaurus
  • Lepidotes
  • Leptolepis
  • Lesothosaurus
  • Limusaurus
  • Liopleurodon
  • Lourinhasaurus
  • Lufengosaurus
  • Mamenchisaurus
  • Megalosaurus
  • Megazostrodon
  • Mesoleuctra
  • Metriacanthosaurus
  • Metriorhynchus
  • Muraenosaurus
  • Omeisaurus
  • Opthalmosaurus
  • Ornitholestes
  • Paramacellodus
  • Patagosaurus
  • Pentasteria
  • Prosalirus
  • Protosuchus
  • Pterodactylus
  • Rhamphorhynchus
  • Rhoetosaurus
  • Scaphognathus
  • Scelidosaurus
  • Sordes
  • Stegosaurus
  • Supersaurus
  • Torvosaurus
  • Turiasaurus
  • Ultrasauros
  • Zigongosaurus

Earlier in the Cretaceous

Paleocene

  • Anqingosaurus
  • Ptilodus

Eocene

  • Lithodryas

Oligocene

  • Andrias
  • Megalodon

Miocene

Pliocene

Pleistocene

Holocene

  • Conquered Lorikeet
  • Meiolania
  • Moa
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