Buy animatronic wild prehistoric animated life size animal Bullockoris Planei statue
MORE INFORMATION
Input | AC 110/220V ,50-60HZ |
Plug | Euro plug / British Standard / SAA / C-UL / or depends on request |
Control mode | Automatic / Infrared / remote / coin / Button / Voice / Touch / Temperature / shooting etc. |
Waterproofing grade | IP66 |
Working condition | Sunshine, rain, seaside, 0~50℃(32℉~82℉) |
Optional function | Sound can be increased to 128 kinds Smoke,/ water. / bleed / smell / change color / change lights / LED screen etc interactive(Location tracking) / conversine(currently only Chinese) |
AFTER-SALE SERVICE
Service | Need be cut for shipping,fwill provide a detailed installation manual. |
Warranty | We provide 2 years warranty for all of our antrimatronic models, the warranty pieriod starts from freight arrives at destination port. Our warranty covers motor, reducer, control box, etc. |
life-size animal lifelike animal theme park live animals Robotic animal theme park animatronic sculpture life size artificial animal zoo park animatronic animal Outdoor playground animatronic simulation robot animals indoor playground equipment for sale theme park robotic animal lifelike animal model animatronic life size animals animatronic prehistoric animals animated life size animals animatronic life-size animals outdoor animal sculpture animal model Mechanical animal simulation animal Dromornis planei, formerly placed in a separate genus Bullockornis, is an extinct flightless bird that lived in the Middle Miocene, approximately 15 million years ago. It is known from specimens of the Bullock Creek fauna, fossils found in the Northern Territory of Australia. As large as an ostrich or emu, the species possessed a stocky build. A proposed common name, referring to its discoverer and locality, is Plane's bull bird. The site of its discovery was once semi-arid site containing low vegetation around seasonal wetlands and rivers. Dromornis planei was a very large flightless bird, similar in height to an ostrich or emu but with a heavier build; the species is however exceeded in size by the largest of these "thunder birds" Dromornis stirtoni. Its bill was curved and deep, the overall size of the head and skull was remarkably large. The species stood approximately 2.5 metres (8 ft 2 in) tall. It may have weighed up to 250 kg (550 lb). Features of skull, including a very large beak suited to shearing, have made some researchers consider that the bird may have been carnivorous, but most currently agree that it was a herbivore. The bird's skull is larger than that of small horses. The species is presumed to have had greatly reduced wing structures, as with other flightless birds the sternum was not keeled. The exceptionally large legs of D. planei enabled it to move its great mass relatively quickly A species known from the Bullock Creek fossil fauna in the Northern Territory, the habitat during the time of deposition was a seasonally wet floodplain and river. The flora was probably sedges and shrubs favouring a semi-arid climate. Dromornis planei remains are found with other large contemporaries, such as the diprotodont Neohelos, and the crocodiles Baru that preyed upon them as they came to the water's edge. The area was occupied by herbivores favoring shrubland, horned turtles, marsupial tapirs and diprotodontid species, but the fauna associated with this site were rarely the forest dwelling paleospecies of the period. Other mihirungs also occur in the Bullock Creek fauna, species of Ilbandornis
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