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    Baryonyx Personality Type, MBTI

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

    Baryonyx
    ISTP

    ISTP (4w5)

    Baryonyx personality type is ISTP, but he doesn’t believe in MBTI.

    My mother was an INTJ (my father is ISTP). Although I am not sure if my mother’s personality is ISTP or INTJ, I can say that I respect them both. I am not sure what the relationship is between these three letters. I believe that it is more important to understand people on an individual level rather than how they categorize themselves.

    The first thing that I noticed about ISTPs is that they are extremely logical and objective. They tend to enjoy doing things that are practical and efficient. They are very organized and prefer to plan ahead, but they also like to think on their feet. They tend to be quiet, reserved, and observant of their surroundings. They tend to be very independent people, but they are also good listeners. They are very independent and found it difficult to communicate with members of the opposite sex until they became more experienced.

    They are very precise and often enjoy making lists of things that need to be done. They are often very goal oriented and find it difficult to procrastinate. They are very analytical and often enjoy putting together lists of reasons why things must be done.

    Baryonyx is a genus of theropod dinosaur which lived in the Barremian stage of the Early Cretaceous period, about 130–125 million years ago. The first skeleton was discovered in 1983 in the Weald Clay Formation of Surrey, England, and became the holotype specimen of Baryonyx walkeri, named by palaeontologists Alan J. Charig and Angela C. Milner in 1986. The generic name, Baryonyx, means "heavy claw" and alludes to the animal's very large claw on the first finger; the specific name, walkeri, refers to its discoverer, amateur fossil collector William J. Walker. The holotype specimen is one of the most complete theropod skeletons from the UK, and its discovery attracted media attention. Specimens later discovered in other parts of the United Kingdom and Iberia have also been assigned to the genus. The holotype specimen, which may not have been fully grown, was estimated to have been between 7.5 and 10 metres long and to have weighed between 1.2 and 1.7 metric tons.

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