Wilson Fisk recently revealed his secret daughter Princess by enrolling her in Lunella's school. For some reason she sneaks into school and tried to steal Lunella's file, but is foiled by Moon Girl who in the middle of the fight trades bodies with Devil. Later Lunella, happy to have Devil Dinosaur back but having to deal with all of his dinosaur issues, transforms him into a human child with the help of her robot double, the Doombot head, and H.E.R.B.I.E. and shortly after enrolls him as a student claiming he is her brother. Princess feels slighted since she did not get to enjoy being the new girl much and complains to Wilson who informs some of his villainous contacts that they may have to deal with Moon Girl while Princess tries to bully them and draw attention back to herself. When that failed she had her father send her back to her old school.

As a result of her Inhuman heritage, Lunella possesses the ability to switch consciousness with Devil Dinosaur whenever she is angry or extremely hungry. Due to her intelligence, she is also capable of speech while in the body of the dinosaur. However, her regular body takes on a feral like personality due to Devil Dinosaur having taken over.[12] She also possesses some manner of enhanced strength, but according to Captain Kree it is radically insignificant compared to her other abilities.[32] She noticed that it tends to happen on the night of the full moon.


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Paleontologists have been trying to identify female and male dinosaurs for decades. Experts have proposed all sorts of tell-tale signs, from ornamentation on the skull to the spacing and angle of splint-like bones beneath the tail. What researchers want are signs of sexual dimorphism, or traits that can distinguish one sex from another.

The machine instead transformed Devil into a 9-year-old boy with the mind of a dinosaur, which left Lunella chasing after him and encountering the villainous Wrecking Crew. Luckily, the side effect wore off just in time and Lunella with her prehistoric partner restored, battled and defeated the Crew. Following the fight, Lunella put her and Devil through a myriad of trials, attempting to break their connection, but it left them both frustrated.

Due to an upcoming update, a large majority of dinosaurs will undergo statistic changes. Dinosaur Simulator Wiki staff is will work hard to fully update the wiki as well, but due to the vast amount of changes it will take some time. This notice will be shown globally. It is highly recommended you properly update this page to meet our wiki's standards, and to make sure we can all access the quality information we deserve when the update goes live. Thank you!

TorvosaurusMaleFemaleBasic InformationDietCarnivoreCarnivoreClassificationTerrestrialCostDNA Icon 350AvailabilityYesTradeableNoHealth Baby Juvenile Health 28 Health 444 Adult Elder Health 923 Health 1647 Damage Baby Juvenile Damage 3 Damage 32 Adult Elder Damage 65 Damage 116 Speed Baby Juvenile Adult Speed 27 / 35 Speed 22 / 27 Speed 18 / 22 MiscellaneousDefenseDefense 15Oxygen10MoistnessNoneGrowth Rate0.8DescriptionA genus of carnivorous Megalosauroidea theropod dinosaurs that lived approximately 153 to 148 million years ago during the Late Jurassic Period in what is now Colorado and Portugal. It contains two currently recognized species, Torvosaurus Tanneri and Torvosaurus gurneyi. "Savage Lizard"Height11 FTLength32 FTWeight8500 LBSDate AddedNovember 18th, 2020Animation byLag0sa and SirBlamesonMade bySirBlameson

The Torvosaurus (Tore-vo-soar-uhs) (savage lizard) is a theropod Dinosaur, it is known for being mostly used by newer players for its frightening appearance. Torvosaurus has a male and female version. Torvosaurus received a remake in November 2020 with Ver[10.2.9] and received a female variant at a price of DNA Icon 1.

Classic TorvosaurusBasic InformationDietCarnivoreCarnivoreClassificationTerrestrialGamepassClassic SkinsAvailabilityYesTradeableNoHealth Baby Juvenile Health 28 Health 444 Adult Elder Health 923 Health 1647 Damage Baby Juvenile Damage 3 Damage 32 Adult Elder Damage 65 Damage 116 Speed Baby Juvenile Adult Speed 27 / 35 Speed 22 / 27 Speed 18 / 22 MiscellaneousDefenseDefense 15Oxygen10MoistnessNoneGrowth Rate0.8DescriptionA genus of carnivorous Megalosauroidea theropod dinosaurs that lived approximately 153 to 148 million years ago during the Late Jurassic Period in what is now Colorado and Portugal. It contains two currently recognized species, Torvosaurus Tanneri and Torvosaurus gurneyi. "Savage Lizard"Height11 FTLength32 FTWeight8500 LBSDate AddedOctober 26th, 2016Made byservez_2build

On February 20, 2018, it was announced that an animated series was in development for Disney Channels Worldwide. The series would be produced by Marvel Animation and Cinema Gypsy Productions. Fishburne and Helen Sugland were set to executive-produce the series.[19] On August 24, 2019, at D23 Expo, Fishburne announced Disney Channel greenlit the series for 2020.[2][14] Concurrently, many of the production crew announced their involvement in the series on Twitter. In an official response, Fishburne stated "Disney Channel is the perfect platform to explore this pint-sized female African American superhero and [he] can't wait for their audience to enjoy the lighthearted adventures of Lunella and Devil Dinosaur",[2] with Cort Lane, then-senior vice president of Marvel Animation & Family Entertainment, adding "[Lunella's] adventures with giant buddy, Devil Dinosaur, are filled with so much wonder and joy, and this historic partnership with Disney Television Animation and Cinema Gypsy Productions proved the right formula to bring them to television".[2]

In most animal species, males and females differ. This is true for people and other mammals, as well as many species of birds, fish and reptiles. But what about dinosaurs? In 2015, I proposed that variation found in the iconic back plates of stegosaur dinosaurs was due to sex differences.

The limited fossil record makes it hard to declare if a dinosaur was sexually dimorphic. But I and some others in my field are beginning to shift away from traditional black-or-white statistical thinking that relies on p-values and statistical significance to define a true finding. Instead of only looking for yes or no answers, we are beginning to consider the estimated magnitude of sexual variation in a species, the degree of uncertainty in that estimate and how these measures compare to other species. This approach offers a more nuanced analysis to challenging questions in paleontology as well as many other fields of science.

These things all suggest that dinosaurs likely were sexually dimorphic. But in science you need to be quantitative. The challenge is that there is little in the way of statistically significant analyses of the fossil record to support dimorphism.

There are a couple of ways paleontologists could test for sexual dimorphism. They could look to see if there are statistically significant differences between fossils from presumed males and females, but there are very few specimens where researchers know the sex. Another method is to see whether there are two distinct groupings of a trait, called a bimodal distribution, which could suggest a difference between males and females.

But p-values can be heavily influenced by sample size and the design of the study, in addition to the actual degree of sexual dimorphism. Because of the very small sample size of fossils, relying on this statistical technique makes it exceedingly difficult to categorically proclaim what dinosaur species were dimorphic.

I have begun to apply effect size statistics in my research on dinosaurs. My colleagues and I compared sexual dimorphism in body size between three different dinosaurs: the duck-billed Maiasaura, Tyrannosaurus rex and Psittacosaurus, a small relative of Triceratops. None of these species would be expected to show statistically significant size differences between males and females according to p-values. But that approach does not capture the nature of the variation within these species.

When we instead used effect size statistics, we were able to estimate that male and female Maiasaura demonstrate a greater difference in body mass compared to the other two species and that we had a higher confidence in this estimate as well. A few of the characteristics within the data helped reduce the uncertainty. First, we had a large number of Maiasaura fossils, from individuals of various ages. These bones very nicely fit with trajectories of how size changes as an individual grows from juvenile to adult, so we could control for differences due to age and instead focus on differences due to sex.

If my colleagues and I had approached the problem expecting a yes or no answer on whether males and females differed in size, we would have completely missed all of these intricacies. Effect size statistics allow researchers to produce much more nuanced and, I think, informative results. It is almost as much a difference in the philosophical approach to science as it is a mathematical one.

Studying dinosaur dimorphism is not the only place p-values create issues. Many fields of science, including medicine and psychology, are having similar debates about issues in statistics and a worrying problem of unrepeatable studies.

we have been taming alot of females and some males, and we have placed all the dinos inside.. but there are rarely eggs layed from anyone of the dinos occasionally there are some eggs and the dodos gives alot of eggs.. i rememeber from earlier that u could get an egg every 3 hours atleast but thats not happening now anyone having any idea on this topic?

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