
Camptosaurus- early relative of the iguanodonts from the Morrison and Portugal. (could also fit in the Pint sized plant-eaters) Kulindadromeus- small bipedal ornithopod which preserves downy fuzz and scales including large rectangular scales forming rows on the tail. Leaellynasaura- small bipedal ornithopod from Australia which had large eyes to see in the dark of the polar winters. Zephyrosaurus- small bipedal herbivore like dryosaurus. (could also fit in the South American pack) Bajadasaurus- similar to Amargasaurus but the spines point forward instead of back, also from South America.

Magyarosaurus- a cow sized sauropods from Romania Saltasaurus- an armoured sauropod from Argentina Ampelosaurus- an armoured sauropod from France Amargasaurus- strange south American sauropods with long dual rowed spines down the neck and short sail or hump over back and hips. Dicraeosaurus- a small sauropod with a short neck Nigerasaurus- bizarre looking diplodocoid with a down turned snout and a wide ended muzzle where all its teeth sat at the front. Qianzhousaurus- a long snouted tyrannosaur from china (could also fit in the Oriental pack) Australovenator- a megaraptorid from Australia. Masiakasaurus-bizarre small theropods from Madagascar with teeth in the front of the jaw that point forward and a slightly down curved lower jaw. Dromaeosaurus- relative of Deinonychus from later in the cretaceous and from Canada Small predator, some believe it had a small horn or crest on its nose (look at WWD from BBC). Ornitholestes- early maniraptoran from the Morrison formation.

Cryolophosaurus- forward facing crested relative of dilophosaurus from Antarctica (could also fit in the Oddities pack) Guanlong- crested early tyrannosaur from china, preserves primitive feathers While making the list I thought of these for possible packs: the Oddities pack (in purple) offering weird and interesting species, an Polar forests pack (in pale blue) offering species from Australia and Antarctica, a South American pack (in tan), an Oriental pack (in red) with species from China, Pint sized plant-eaters (in green) for truly small herbivores like the small ornithopods. Some of these could come out in themed packs of dinosaurs. Also some of the weird or bizarre looking species could make interesting additions to the parks. The game could use for some small ornithopod dinosaurs to add some diversity to exhibits without needing lots of space and can handle higher population sizes than the pachys.
