What is the personality type of Deinonychus? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Deinonychus from Primeval 2007 and what is the personality traits.
Deinonychus personality type is ENTP, or “Chaos.”
My students are often surprised to discover that their dinosaurs are ENTP. For example, “My dinosaur likes to solve riddles, but he’s also very curious.” Or, “I’ve noticed that my dinosaur has an attitude problem. He’s always trying to get out of the cage, but he can’t figure out how.”
The ENTP personality type is one of the most common. It describes about 30% of the population. You’ll find them in all sorts of careers, from doctors to businesspeople.
They are exuberant by nature. They are curious, intelligent, and full of ideas. They love to learn new things and they are always coming up with new ideas for things they can create or improve.
They’re also very creative, imaginative, and inspired. They can see all sorts of possibilities in everything they see. They thrive when they are working on something productive and creative.
ENTPs also have a high level of tolerance for ambiguity. They can see things in many different ways and can accept different points of view without dismissing any of them.
Deinonychus is a genus of dromaeosaurid theropod dinosaur with one described species, Deinonychus antirrhopus. This species, which could grow up to 3.4 meters long, lived during the early Cretaceous Period, about 115–108 million years ago. Fossils have been recovered from the U.S. states of Montana, Utah, Wyoming, and Oklahoma, in rocks of the Cloverly Formation, Cedar Mountain Formation and Antlers Formation, though teeth that may belong to Deinonychus have been found much farther east in Maryland. Paleontologist John Ostrom's study of Deinonychus in the late 1960s revolutionized the way scientists thought about dinosaurs, leading to the "dinosaur renaissance" and igniting the debate on whether dinosaurs were warm-blooded or cold-blooded. Before this, the popular conception of dinosaurs had been one of plodding, reptilian giants.