How to use in-sentence of “skull”:
– They find the skull and come up only to find Mac and some Soviets pointing weapons at them.
– The Rangers’ friends Bulk and Skull are accidentally turned into chimps for several weeks, but their old boss Lt.
– There is only a partial skull from strata in western Texas.
– The bones on the skull surface are unusually smooth, unlike the pitted skulls of many other early tetrapods.
– Various features of the forelimbs, skull and pelvis show they are theropods and maniraptorans, close relatives to birds.
– In 2001, a hominid skull was discovered in Chad.

Example sentences of “skull”:
– On the occurrence of “Ziphius cavirostris” in the Shetland Seas, and a comparison of its skull with that of Sowerby’s whale.
– Its skull and teeth suggest it was, like the other members of its group, a browser on leaves and small branches.
– However, Dr Virginie Millien, from McGill University in Montreal, said the mathematical models originally used to calculate the rodent’s mass from its skull probably overestimated its body size.
– Anemia can cause bones in the skull to flatten.
– He is thought to be one of the most important said to be born from the skull of Seth also said to be born from the heart of Ra.
– Usually, the gender of a skeleton is determined using the bones in the skull and the pelvis.
– The shape of the skull and the fact that the feet face forward rather than outward.
– Compared to them, the polecat has a shorter, more compact body; a more powerfully built skull and teeth; and is less agile.
– The smallest length of the skull in males is 318 to 343mm.
– A “Homo habilis” skull and a “Homo erectus” skull, discovered in 1972 and 1975, respectively, were among the most significant finds of Leakey’s earlier expeditions.
– As the process continues, the forehead becomes more vertical, the skull becomes rounder, the teeth are reduced in size, arms are shorter and legs are longer, and the skeleton becomes more delicate.
- On the occurrence of "Ziphius cavirostris" in the Shetland Seas, and a comparison of its skull with that of Sowerby’s whale.
- Its skull and teeth suggest it was, like the other members of its group, a browser on leaves and small branches.
– The first, and only, fossils discovered were several skull bones found in Argentina.
– Jane’s skull is almost exactly the same as the skull of the original “Nanotyrannus” specimen, which means they are the same species.
– Knowledge of “Deinosuchus” is still incomplete, but better skull material has been found in recent years.
– Because “Andrewsarchus” is only known from a skull and a few other bones, whether it was an active predator or merely a large scavenger is open to debate, as is its exact time range.
– The axial skeleton is formed by the vertebral column, the rib cage, the skull and other associated bones.
– It most resembles Leptoceratops but with larger nasal apertures, less teeth in the upper jaw and more in the lower jaw – there are also differences in its teeth and skull bones.
– The only fossil lacks key elements: most of the skull and the whole lower body is missing.
– Images tend to show the dakini as a young, naked figure in a dancing posture, often holding a skull cup filled with menstrual blood or the elixir of life in one hand, and a curved knife in the other.
More in-sentence examples of “skull”:
- In 1868 Professor Marsh said Cope put the skull of dinosaur at the tail end.
- The movie was in "development hell" since the 1989 release of "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade", because Spielberg and Ford did not agree over Lucas's choice of the skull as the center plot device.
– In 1868 Professor Marsh said Cope put the skull of dinosaur at the tail end.
– The movie was in “development hell” since the 1989 release of “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade”, because Spielberg and Ford did not agree over Lucas’s choice of the skull as the center plot device.
– The Gorgonopsids meaning “Gorgon arch” Gorgon was a beast in Greek mythology whose gaze could turn you to stone, and arch refers to synapsid skull holes were Therapsids, a group of tetrapods which eventually gave rise to the mammals.
– The skull also has an imprint of the brain.
– The skull was light enough to allow attacks on smaller and more agile ornithopods, but strong enough for high-impact ambush attacks against larger prey like stegosaurs and sauropods.
– The skeleton shows that Lucy had a small skull capacity, like an ape, but also that she walked upright like a human.
– The signs lit up with the words “Stop-DEATH-Stop” along with a neon skull and crossbones.
– They found a 3.5 million-year-old skull and partial jaw thought to belong to a new branch of our early human family.
– This skull is often called the Taung Child, after Taung, South Africa where it was found.
– Its skull was over 2 feet long.
– Maria’s skull does not have any bullet wounds, though.
– This was determined by “united seams in the skull and fused epiphyses in long bones.
– Without this cushion, every time a person moved their head, their brain would hit the inside of the skull and would get hurt.
– Cranial capacity of the Broken Hill skull has been estimated at 1,100cm³.
– In January 1846, a weird-looking skull was taken from the banks of Murrumbidgee River in New South Wales.
– It was a quadrupedal herbivore with a long, low skull on the end of a long neck, much like its relative “Dicraeosaurus”.
– On its skull are three areas which obviously had a special function.
– Like other stegosaurians, “Huayangosaurus” was a quadrupedal herbivore with a small skull and a spiked tail.
– It is perhaps the most complete skull of “A.
– Udanoceratops had a very large skull with no nasal horn.
– In art, he is shown as a hairless, bearded mummified man, often wearing a skull cap, holding a djed or other large tool.
– The feeding habits of “Therizinosaurus” are unknown, since no skull material has ever been found that could indicate its diet.
– This conclusion was reached by noting similarities in the damage to the skull and eye sockets of the Taung Child to the skulls of primates known to have been killed by modern eagles.
– The skull is from an extremely robust individual, and has the comparatively largest brow-ridges of any known hominid remains.
– They consist of over 80 fragments; the skull found belonged to a man in his twenties.
– The partial skull resembles that of “Parasaurolophus” from North America.
– It began in the 19th century with the discovery of a skull of “Neanderthal man” in 1856.
– The skull would have been about 50 cm when complete.
– Unknown to him, the skull is actually a symbol of death representing the Aztec death god.
– She also gave him a human skull for his 13th birthday.
– Gould concluded that the large antler size and their position on the skull was very much maintained by sexual selection.
– After Joseph made an important find of an ichthyosaur skull in 1810 and Mary found the associated skeleton a year later, they became known to the geologists and amateurs interested in fossils.
– If a part of the skull was pushed out it would mean that trait was better.
– They are also have a heavily armoured skull roof, and complex vertebrae.
– In other words, their skull shape was a basal feature.
– The final four teams stayed in the match for a while until Skull was eliminated by Phineas.
– The remains of the type of “Monolophosaurus” preserve a complete skull and partial postcranium.
– In some ways it was more robust and had a shorter, broader skull than the modern Thylacine.
– On 17 March 1999, Hull died from a serious skull fracture and chest injuries.
– Its skull was up to sixty centimeters long, armed with a powerful, hook-tipped beak.
– These come from the cartilage displaced from their skull as it develops.
– The largest known skull is estimated to have been in length when complete, and could reach almost a third of the length of the entire animal.
– The skull is dated to 2.5 million years ago, before the other forms of robust australopithecines.
– Simulations of a terror bird strike produced by the Discovery Channel Terror Bird using a pneumatic model have demonstrated the larger species could easily crush the skull of its prey and puncture through bone with its beak.
– Some scientists think the more rigid skull of “Tarbosaurus” was an adaptation to hunting the massive sauropods found in Asia, which did not exist in most of North America during the later Cretaceous.
