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Albertosaurus Attack! (Revised)

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This is the revised version of trefrex.deviantart.com/art/Alb… with no cartoony looks and facial expressions and I replaced the Edmontosaurus with Hypacrosaurus. 


Alberta Canada (Upper Horseshoe Canyon Formation)
68,500,000 BC 
Early Maastrichtian stage of the Late Cretaceous period

As evening draws in an open coastal marsh, a herd of Hypacrosaurus altispinus graze and feed on the vegetation. Stalking them close by is a family of Albertosaurus sarcophagus that range from adults and juveniles, waiting to take down a straggler. The little tyrannosaurids stalks at the herd, while their parents heads out further for an ambush. Juveniles are faster, slimmer, and agile than the adults and their motive is to chase down and drive their prey to the adults for an ambush. 

As young Albertosaurus comes closer, the Hypacrosaurus senses, crying out honking noises, and begins to stampede. The young albertosaurs sees a straggler fleeing and chases after it. The limping Hypacrosaurus is left behind from its herd and is being chased and attacked by the young albertosaurs, one of them took a bite on its side a rips a large chunk of meat. Lost and separated from its herd, the limping hadrosaur tries to call for them, but it was too late when suddenly, as it enters the pond, an adult Albertosaurus ambushes and takes a big bite on the hypacrosaur's neck while another adult takes a bite on its back. The juveniles join the attack. The Hypacrosaurus struggles to free itself and limps off slowly. The Albertosaurus family follows. Mortally wounded and bleeding heavily, the Hypacrosaurus makes one last low honk and collapses on the pond with a huge splash. Once their prey is down, the Albertosaurus pack begins to close in on their kill.
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Tyrannosaurs can't take chunks out, their teeth aren't suited for it. It would try to cripple the prey by biting the leg or tail, those teeth don't have a cutting edge and are usually blunt from biting through bone.