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    Apatosaurus Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of Apatosaurus? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Apatosaurus from Extinct Animals and what is the personality traits.

    Apatosaurus
    ISFJ

    ISFJ (9w1)

    Apatosaurus personality type is ISFJ, a rare type that is rarer still in the T-Rex family. This is a very introverted, reserved, and private creature. He's a pretty shy guy who is not very communicative and prefers to keep his thoughts and feelings to himself unless he feels the need to talk. He's pretty independent, but can be a little bit stubborn as well. He has a very keen sense of responsibility, and he takes his duties very seriously. His sense of duty and responsibility is what leads him to protect his loved ones, but he doesn't like to show too much of himself. He tends to keep a lot inside, and it's not unusual for him to have a hard time expressing himself properly. He also tends to have a hard time with emotional connections. This dinosaur's type is also sometimes called the "Reptilian" because he so often keeps his emotions inside.

    I'm not going to talk about the other dinosaurs since they each have their own personality types. But I will say that the reason this dinosaur was an ISFJ is because he takes his job as a protector very seriously, and is very conscientious and responsible with what he does. So that means that he is an extremely loyal and devoted person.

    Apatosaurus is a genus of herbivorous sauropod dinosaur that lived in North America during the Late Jurassic period. Othniel Charles Marsh described and named the first-known species, A. ajax, in 1877, and a second species, A. louisae, was discovered and named by William H. Holland in 1916. Apatosaurus lived about 152 to 151 million years ago, during the late Kimmeridgian to early Tithonian age, and are now known from fossils in the Morrison Formation of modern-day Colorado, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Wyoming, and Utah in the United States. Apatosaurus had an average length of 21–22.8 m, and an average mass of 16.4–22.4 t. A few specimens indicate a maximum length of 11–30% greater than average and a mass of 32.7–72.6 t. The cervical vertebrae of Apatosaurus are less elongated and more heavily constructed than those of Diplodocus, a diplodocid like Apatosaurus, and the bones of the leg are much stockier despite being longer, implying that Apatosaurus was a more robust animal.

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