10, Liujiaxia Huang Helong
The Liujiaxia Huang Helong discovered in Lanzhou Basin, Gansu Province is the largest sauropod dinosaur found in the world.
9, Gu's Microraptor
Discovered in beipiao city, Liaoning Province, Microraptor is the most complete and smallest four-winged dinosaur found in the world. It may be arboreal, which provides evidence for the evolution of small dinosaurs to birds.
8. Primitive Chinese Bird Dragon
China primitive bird dragon was found in Beipiao, Liaoning Province. It is the most complete "feathered dinosaur" found in the world. It provides evidence for the genetic relationship between dinosaurs and birds, and has epoch-making significance in the history of dinosaur research.
7. Taibai pattern dragon
Taibai Huayang Dragon, discovered in Zigong, Sichuan, is the most primitive and well-preserved stegosaurus found in the world.
6. Giant Shandong Dragon
Shandong Julong, 1964, discovered by petroleum geological survey in Zhucheng, Shandong. It is the largest hadrosaur exhibited in the world, about 14.7 meters long.
5. Mamen Xilong in Hechuan
Mamen Xilong in Hechuan, 1957, was discovered in Hechuan, Sichuan by No.4 Geological Survey Team of Sichuan Petroleum Administration. It is the first longest dinosaur exhibited in China, about 22 meters long.
4. Qingdao spinonasal dragon
The Tsingtao sauropod, 1950, discovered by Shandong University in Laiyang, Shandong Province, is the first dinosaur fossil discovered after the founding of New China.
3. Xu's Lu Fenglong
Xu's Lufenglong was discovered in Lufeng, Yunnan on 1938. This is the first dinosaur discovered, excavated, studied and displayed by China people.
2. Panlong of organization
Pan Zulong was discovered in Mengyin (present-day xintai city) between 1922 and 1923 by Austrian teacher Tanski and China geologist Tan Xichou. The fossil was transported to Uppsala University in Sweden and named by the famous Swedish paleontologist Weiman on 1929. It is the first sauropod dinosaur in China.
1, Manchurian dragon in Heilongjiang
Heilongjiang Manzhoulong, 1902, in Jiayin, Heilongjiang Province, was awarded as "the second righteous dragon in China" because it was acquired by Russian Colonel Manakin from local fishermen. Fossils were transported to Russia. In 1925, it was named as Heilongjiang Toothed Dragon by Yabin, a paleontologist of the former Soviet Union, and in 1930, it was named as Northeast Dragon in Heilongjiang. Orthomorphic fossils of Heilongjiang Manchu dragons exist in geological museum, St Petersburg, Russia.