05/05/2026
Apologies for the hiatus everyone… let the prehistoric knowledge resume flowing 🌊
With claws stretching over a meter in length, Therizinosaurus possessed some of the most extreme limb adaptations ever seen in a terrestrial animal. Yet, paradoxically, it was not a predator. Its skull—small, lightly built, and tipped with a beak—lacked the bone-crushing bite of carnivorous theropods because its diet was primarily herbivorous, likely consisting of leaves, branches, and soft vegetation.
Its elongated forelimbs were not built for speed or grappling prey, but for reach and display. These claws may have been used to pull down high vegetation, strip foliage, or intimidate predators because their thin structure made them poorly suited for high-impact combat. The feathered body suggests insulation and possibly display behavior, aligning it more closely with modern birds than reptiles.
Discovered in Mongolia’s Late Cretaceous deposits, Therizinosaurus represents a radical evolutionary departure—a theropod that abandoned carnivory. It stands as evidence that evolution does not follow a linear path, but instead explores extremes, producing creatures that challenge our expectations of form and function.